Smelly studios and fleas cause Cyprus TV walkout

(Reuters Life!) – News staff at Cyprus’s state broadcaster briefly walked off the job on Monday over conditions which included smelly studios and an infestation of fleas, workers said.

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“We demand a decent and safe place to work,” a staff member told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Management are trying to find suitable work spaces for staff. Management were not immediately available for comment, but had said last week that they were working on improving job conditions.

The aging premises of the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation in Nicosia have been causing problems for years, either from an invasion of cats, or fleas.

There were several incidents of members of staff falling ill after pest controllers were called to the premises last week, staff said.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

Miscreants injure one in Manipur oil pump attack

Imphal, June 4 (ANI): Unidentified miscreants opened fire and lobbed a hand grenade of Chinese make at an oil pump in Hiyangthang area of Imphal West recently.

Twenty-five-year-old Sadokpam Dhruva, a staff member at the petrol pump station, sustained bullet injuries on his leg.

Dhruva said: “Those miscreants asked my friends to stand a little further from the oil tank. They shot at me and, the first bullet missed and it passed through my pant. The second round hit my thigh.” (ANI)

Stud farm to halve workforce

The horse breeding operation, Darley, has confirmed it will cut jobs from its Cootamundra farm as part of a restructure.

The Twin Hills stud on Dirnaseer Road at Cootamundra was sold to the ruler of Dubai more than two years ago.

Darley’s general manager, Henry Plumptre, says the Twin Hills stallion operation will close by the end of June but the spelling facility will stay open.

It will mean the loss of 26 jobs including 12 casual positions, leaving 13 staff including managers.

Mr Plumptre says he has spoken to staff about their entitlements and will help them find new jobs.

“We needed to shut that stallion operation and get Cootamundra back to an operational level so that it is sustainable, but without being a complete drain on the resources of the company elsewhere,” he said.

“Everyone would have been aware, not just in Australia but around the world, that Dubai had an issue last year and that necessarily changes the parameters of how we operate.

“If that means that we have to make economies of scale and run our operations more efficiently then unfortunately there are circumstances which arise from that.”

Mr Plumptre says the company will do what it can to assist staff to find other jobs.

“If a staff member finds a job for example in the next few weeks and wants to leave they are still obviously paid their full entitlements, but they can leave anytime they like,” he said

“Those who request help from the company will be given that help.”

Darley’s clients will be asked to remove their mares from the property by June 30.

Mr Plumptre says Darley will continue to have a presence in the region in the short-term.

“We could never say the property will not be sold because if a suitable buyer came along who wanted to operate Twin Hills as a going concern and keep the staff on in a working capacity, we would probably be silly to turn it down,” he said.

“However, to get someone to take over a property like that and run it the way that Darley would run the property is very difficult and it’s not easy to find people who want to do that sort of thing, especially in a world that is coming out of recession.

“At the moment, we’re winding back to a sustainable level. We will keep it going in the short-term future and hopefully something will come up.”

Cootamundra Mayor Paul Braybrooks says it is concerning to see the jobs losses.

“Not only are they obviously very much an important prestigious facility in Cootamundra but they’re also an enormous employer,” he said.

“Also they’ve put a lot of money through the local businesses and the local community.

“Obviously job losses in a community is not something which anybody is happy about but I hope that in time they will return a lot of the tasks to Darley.”

Aussie ‘heroes’ land crippled plane

The Australian pilots of a Cathay Pacific flight who managed to steer an Airbus A330 plane to safety at Hong Kong’s airport after both its engines malfunctioned have been hailed as heroes.

Cathay Pacific said in a statement that the plane’s left engine had shut down as the aircraft made its landing approach at Hong Kong’s international airport on Tuesday with 309 passengers on a flight from Surabaya in Indonesia.

The right engine also began to “cut out inexplicably, leaving the [pilots] to cope with dips and surges in power and the prospect of the plane plunging into the sea short of [the airport],” the South China Morning Post reported.

The emergency landing caused all four tyres on the left hand side of the plane to deflate, while two on the right side also deflated, the airline said.

Passengers were evacuated on emergency inflatable slides. There were eight injuries.

“It was an amazing piece of piloting in extremely testing circumstances,” one colleague of the two Australian pilots was quoted as saying by the South China Morning Post.

“One engine was shut down completely and the other was going on and off. They effectively landed the plane on half an engine.

“Their stories will come out in due course when the investigation is complete but what they did was nothing short of heroic. It’s a miracle they managed to get the plane down safely,” the paper quoted another Cathay Pacific staff member as saying.

Hong Kong’s Civil Aviation department said it would investigate the “serious aircraft incident” and release a report in a month’s time.

Rann failing to question hospitals plan: Oppn

The South Australian Opposition says Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is throwing money around ‘like a drunken sailor’ in a bid to attract support from the states for the federal hospitals plan.

The Opposition says the SA Government has accepted the plan at face value.

It provides for a federal takeover of Australia’s hospitals, including the sweetener for aged care.

There have been questions from other states but SA Premier Mike Rann is offering his strong support for Mr Rudd’s proposal.

SA Liberal health spokesman Duncan McFetridge says extra money is a bribe.

“Their silence on the Kevin Rudd proposal, other than tacit approval, to me indicates that they would be more than happy to hand over the SA health system to the Federal Government,” he said.

But a staff member for the Premier says Mr Rann has been negotiating with Mr Rudd and will have more questions at a Council of Australian Governments meeting next week.

Fees to rise under childcare changes

Childcare fees will rise by up to $4 a day under a new staffing ratio to be introduced next year, the New South Wales Government says.

All centre-based and mobile children’s services will have to employ one staff member for every four children in care aged two or under from January.

The change from the current ratio of 1:5 is being introduced ahead of a national January 2012 deadline but one year later than originally announced.

Community Services Minister Linda Burney says an economic impact analysis has found fees will rise by $1 to $4 a day.

“Our discussions with parents [have found] they believe that the quality their children will get will outweigh the extra cost that will come with it,” she said.

Ms Burney says the changes have been delayed to give the industry and parents time to prepare.

She says an independent survey has found more than a third of childcare centres already operate at a 1:4 ratio.

Increasing numbers struggle to pay bills

The body representing financial counsellors says yesterday’s interest rate rise will push the finances of many West Australians to breaking point.

The Reserve Bank has raised interest rates to 4.25 per cent.

The Financial Counsellors Association represents 91 counsellors based across the state and runs a free counselling hot line for people in need of assistance.

It usually fields 30 to 40 calls for counselling assistance each day.

The Association’s Charles Brown says demand for counsellors is high and there are lengthy waiting lists for help.

“It’s becoming busier and busier, the cases coming through are also becoming more complex because of people relying on easy money and credit in the past are getting to a situation where people just can’t pay bills.”

Mr Brown says in the last year the organisation has gone from having one staff member to ten, because of a huge spike in demand from middle income earners needing help managing their finances.

He expects inquiries for income management assistance to continue to climb.

“We’re already finding that most financial counsellors have a waiting list of two to three weeks.

“That’s as a result of increases in utility charges and any interest rate rises just exacerbate that situation.”

Police hunt after takeaway armed robbery

Tasmanian police are searching for two men who robbed a Launceston takeaway.

Police say the men were wearing white hooded tops when they entered the Thistle Street takeaway about 2:30am.

The male staff member said he was threatened with what appeared to be firearms.

The men stole cash and cigarettes.

Police hunt for armed robbers

Police fear two armed men who robbed a TOTE Tasmania outlet in Hobart last night could strike again.

They are searching for two men who they say threatened a TOTE staff member and a customer with large knives, one the size of a machete, at the Derwent Park outlet.

Police say the offenders then fled with cash from TOTE as well as money from both victims’ wallets.

Inspector Ian Whish-Wilson from Glenorchy CIB says a team of detectives is reviewing closed circuit television footage of the incident and would also like to speak to witnesses.

“They were wearing black balaclavas, they were also wearing blue overalls and sneaker-type shoes,” he said.

“Obviously it’s a concern that people are out there committing this type of crime and we [ask] that the public give us any information that’s available.”

Knife bandits hold up hotel

A hotel at Forbes has been robbed at knifepoint.

Police say about midnight last night an unknown number of people entered the Commercial Hotel in Rankin Street armed with a knife or knives.

They say an employee was punched and tied up and the thieves stole a large sum of money.

Detectives are at the hotel this morning and a crime scene has been established.

The staff member was treated by ambulance officers for a head injury.

Terry injures club official in car accident

Chelsea captain John Terry accidentally struck a club security official with his car after the Champions League defeat to Inter Milan, the Premier League side revealed.

The staff member sustained a leg injury in the incident, which happened as Terry was leaving his side’s Stamford Bridge stadium after the 1-0 loss.

The 29-year-old centre-back was reportedly not aware of what had happened at the time but later spoke to police about it and also made contact with the member of staff involved.

“We can confirm there was an unfortunate accident as John Terry left Stamford Bridge last night,” a Chelsea spokesman said.

“When driving out of the stadium at approximately one to two miles-per-hour in a queue of traffic exiting the ground, his car was surrounded by photographers and fans.

“In the melee that ensued a member of Chelsea’s security staff was knocked to the ground, making contact with the car. He suffered a badly bruised leg.

“John was aware at the time that there was a lot of contact with his car during the incident, but not that anyone was injured as a result.

“Upon hearing of the injury, John spoke to the police. He has also been in contact with the staff member to check on his welfare.”

The Metropolitan police confirmed reports about the incident but said the victim had suffered a broken leg.

-AFP

Hospital hands newborn to wrong mother

Broken Hill Hospital in the far west of New South Wales is reviewing procedures after a newborn baby was mistakenly given to the wrong mother.

The mix-up occurred early on Saturday morning when the newborn was given to the wrong mother for breastfeeding.

A Greater Western Area Health Service spokesperson says the woman then noticed it was not her baby.

The health service says the infant was tagged correctly and it was a case of human error.

The hospital has apologised to both mothers and the staff member involved has been counselled.

In a statement, the hospital says procedures will be reviewed to ensure another mix-up does not occur.

Qld Health corrects mental health claims

Queensland Health has denied that 25 clients from a youth and mental health service were suddenly left without care in central Queensland.

The Member for Gladstone, Liz Cunningham, told Parliament last month that 25 mental health clients in Gladstone were informed their care would stop due to a staff member falling ill and needing extended leave.

Mrs Cunningham said it highlighted the need for another child mental health worker in the city.

In a statement to the ABC, Queensland Health says 12 clients were affected by the situation, not 25.

It says two of those were discharged for a doctor to follow up and the other 10 were transferred to other services or case managers.

Woman suspended for having sex in police station

London, Aug 31 (ANI): A Brit woman has been suspended after being caught having sex with a stranger on a table at the police station where she works.

Single mum Kim Bedford, 43, is said to have taken the man back to the station after she met him at a pub, and was discovered by a PC who checked on her office after hearing moans coming out of it.

“Kim was on all fours in a state of undress with the man behind her on the table. Top brass were informed,” the Sun quoted an insider as saying.

Bedford, a civilian, a resources officer in charge of buying furniture at Streatham nick, South London, refused to comment.

The Met confirmed a staff member had been suspended. (ANI)

At Indonesian air force plane crash killed around 98 people

Jakarta, (May 20) At least 98 people, including 14 children, were killed and scores injured today when an ageing Indonesian military plane carrying soldiers and their families crashed into homes in East Java and burst into flames. A total of 112 people were aboard when the US-made C-130 Hercules transport plane crashed in Magetan, about 520 kms east of capital Jakarta, officials said.

The crash destroyed four homes and killed two people who lived in at least one of the homes, said Suwardi, the village leader of Karas in East Java. The plane had a crew of 14 and was carrying an additional 98 passengers, officials said.

It was flying from Jakarta to the eastern province of Papua via Magetan. Fourteen children were among 98 people killed in the crash, they said.

At least 15 people from the flight had been rescued, Bambang Sulistyo, an Indonesian air force spokesman, said adding that soldiers and rescue workers continued to search the charred wreckage for human remains. Wahyu Nuryanto, a staff member at the Iswahyudi hospital in nearby Madiun, said that 19 people were brought to the hospital — several with serious injuries, including multiple fractures.

The 19 included air force personnel, their family members and civilians, Nuryanto said. PTI.

Hugh Jackman says sorry for Twitter error

Washington, Apr 9 (ANI): Hugh Jackman has been forced to apologise after an employee made an embarrassing error on his Twitter page.

After the incident, it came to the fore that the Australian actor was using an online marketing team to manage his online blogging.

The ‘X-Men’ star has thousands of fans visiting his Twitter page everyday to read his regular online posts.

However, recently Jackman faced huge criticism in his native Australia after he mistakenly referred to Sydney’s famous Opera House as the ‘Opera Centre’.

Later, the actor had to confess that he hadn’t been updating the page himself, and instead relied on a staff member in America to do his blogging for him.

“I communicated it over the phone and when that got translated by someone American in my office it came out all wrong,” Contactmusic quoted him as saying.

He added: “I do know the Opera House is called the Opera House – I think I had my high school leaving assembly at the Opera House when I was 18 so I should know that one.” (ANI)

Red Cross staff member killed in Sri Lanka

Geneva, April 9 (Xinhua) A staff member of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has been killed in Sri Lanka’s conflict area, the Geneva-based organisation said.

Sinnathurai Kugathasan was working for ICRC since 2002 as a water technician. He was hit by a shell Wednesday and killed instantly while fetching water in Ampalavanpokanai, on the coastal belt of the territory held by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), ICRC said in a statement.

Kugathasan was married and has three children.

On March 4, Vadivel Vijayakumar, another ICRC water technician, was also killed by shrapnel in the coastal area.

Despite the incidents, the ICRC continues its essential activities to help conflict-

affected people throughout the country, the organisation said.

The LTTE rebels have been fighting with Sri Lankan military for over two decades in order to set up a separate homeland for the minority Tamil community in the country.

More than 70,000 people have been killed since the mid-1980s in one of the world’s longest civil wars.

Russell Brand’s concert tickets being sold for £2.50

London, April 8 (ANI): Tickets for controversial comic Russell Brand’s stand-up gig are being sold for as low as 2.50 pounds.

Seatwave, an online fan-to-fan ticket exchange operating in the European market, was still left with over 140 tickets for the upcoming show at London’s 14,500 seat O2 Arena.

According to Joe Cohen, CEO of Seatwave, even prime seats were having a face value of 26.50 pounds.We’ve seen tickets being sold for as low as 2.50 pounds and many are selling below face value,” the Daily Star quoted him as saying.

However, promoters Phil McIntyre Entertainment insisted that the concert, which will be filmed for a DVD, was “technically a sell-out”.

A staff member said: “We’re very pleased with the way things are going.

“There’s always a bit of confusion when a gig is being filmed – you’re never sure what seats can be released until everything is sorted.”

Brand has made the headlines with a series of controversial comments including his recent taunt at Justice Secretary Jack Straw on his Twitter page saying, “No wonder your son took drugs.”

The 33-year-old had also landed in hot water with fellow prankster Jonathan Ross over the Andrew Sachs row, which led to his resignation from the BBC after he boasted about sleeping with the 78-year-old’s granddaughter. (ANI)

UN condemns in strongest terms the suicide attacks in Kandahar

UN condemns in strongest terms the suicide attacks in Kandahar New York – UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon condemned Wednesday the suicide bombing attacks on a government provincial office in Kandahar which killed at least two people and injured a large number of others, including a UN employee.

“Such attacks indiscriminately targeting people and institutions committed to building a better future for the country are morally repugnant and can only set back the efforts to foster peace, reconciliation and stability in Afghanistan,” Ban said in a statement.

The attacks targeted the provincial office situated next to an office of the UN mission in Afghanistan, injuring a staff member.

Ban also sent condolences and sympathy to families of the victims and the Afghan government. (dpa)