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Kelly family hand over Kings Cross CCTV

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 07 Maret 2014 | 19.19

The family of punch victim Thomas Kelly hope a new CCTV camera will serve as a preventative measure. Source: AAP

THE family of coward punch victim Thomas Kelly hope a new CCTV camera in Kings Cross will make people think twice before orchestrating a violent attack.

The Thomas Kelly Foundation was established following the 18-year-old's death in 2012.

Thomas was fatally punched while walking through Kings Cross with friends.

Last year Daniel Christie was punched on the same stretch of road.

He died in hospital from critical head injuries.

The foundation, established by Thomas' parents Ralph and Kathy Kelly, and the City of Sydney have funded a CCTV camera in Victoria Street to cover the spot where Thomas and Daniel lost their lives.

The Kelly family handed over the new camera on Friday.

Mr Kelly said he saw CCTV cameras as a preventative measure.

"Whilst they won't stop the assaults occurring by themselves, if it makes some people think twice before committing a violent attack, then they have an important role to play," he said in a statement.

Mr Kelly said the arrest of Thomas' attacker was supplemented by hours of vision from CCTV cameras.

The City of Sydney has a plan to install 10 extra CCTV cameras at night spots around Surry Hills, Kings Cross and the CBD.

The new cameras will be monitored 24 hours a day at the city's Security and Emergency Operations Centre at Town Hall.


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Man struck by lightning in Sydney's west

A man has been struck by lightning as severe thunderstorms sweep across Sydney. Source: AAP

A MAN has been struck by lightning as severe thunderstorms sweep across Sydney.

A NSW Fire and Rescue spokesman said the 65-year-old man was struck outside his home in Baulkham Hills, in northwest Sydney, at 5pm on Friday.

Fire fighters administered first aid to the man, who was conscious but disoriented, the spokesman said.

He has been taken to hospital.

There is a severe thunderstorm warning in place for parts of Sydney, particularly the western suburbs.


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Melbourne siblings, 15 and 3, go missing

A 15-year-old girl and her three-year-old brother have disappeared from their home in Melbourne. Source: AAP

A THREE-YEAR-OLD boy and his teenage sister have gone missing from Melbourne's north.

Paris, 15, and Corey Prince were last known to be at their home in Reservoir on Monday.

Police have been told the siblings are with a male family member but are concerned for the children's welfare given their age and the ability of the family member to care for them.

Despite searching a number of locations the children have not been found and anyone who sees them is urged to call triple-zero.

Paris has coloured hair and a slim build, while Corey has brown hair.


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Pistorius trigger-happy gun lover, ex says

A WITNESS at the murder trial of South African double-amputee Olympic sprinter Oscar Pistorius has depicted him as a gun lover who once shot through the sunroof of a car to amuse himself.

Pistorius' ex-girlfriend Samantha Taylor testified on the fifth day of the trial on Friday that Pistorius always carried his gun with him and placed it next to his bed at night.

Taylor described an incident on September 30, 2012, when she was with Pistorius and their friend Darren Fresco in a car.

Police stopped them for speeding and saw Pistorius' pistol, prompting the athlete, who has a licence to carry a gun, to shout that the officer was not allowed to touch the weapon, she said.

After the three took off again with Fresco at the wheel, the two men said they wanted to shoot at traffic lights, she testified. Pistorius then fired a shot through the open sunroof of the car with both men laughing, she said.

"The shot was fired because they were angry with the police," Taylor said.

"They found it funny because they were irritating the police."

Taylor, who was the eighth witness to testify at the trial, said she broke up with Pistorius because he was cheating on her with Reeva Steenkamp.

Pistorius, 27, is charged with the premeditated murder of Steenkamp, his model girlfriend whom he shot through the bathroom door in his Pretoria home on February 14, 2013.

He said he mistook her for an intruder.

The athlete also faces three separate gun-related charges at the trial, which is expected to last two more weeks.

During Taylor's testimony, Pistorius stared steadfastly at the witness, who broke into tears several times.

Another witness this week described an incident in which Pistorius was with Fresco and other friends at a restaurant. The witness said Fresco handed Pistorius his gun and the athlete fired a shot at the floor, apparently accidentally. He then asked Fresco to take the blame for the incident, according to the testimony.

Both the alleged shots in the restaurant and through the sunroof are among the gun-related charges filed against Pistorius.

But the proceedings have focused on Steenkamp's killing with several witnesses testifying they heard a woman scream as if her life were in danger on the night she died.

One of Pistorius' neighbours who is also a doctor described on Thursday how he found Pistorius crouching next to the wounded Steenkamp. He said the athlete cried profusely and asked God to save her.

Pistorius, whose legs were amputated before his first birthday because of a congenital defect, became the first amputee to compete against able-bodied athletes in the Olympics in London in 2012.

His carbon-fibre prostheses earned him the nickname "Blade Runner".

Hundreds of journalists are in Pretoria to report on the world's most high-profile trial involving an athlete since the 1994-95 proceedings against American football star OJ Simpson.

The trial, featuring more than 100 witnesses, is the first in South Africa to be partly televised live.

If found guilty of murder, Pistorius could receive a life sentence, which would require him to spend a minimum of 25 years in prison.


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Newborn found dead on Melbourne footpath

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 06 Maret 2014 | 19.19

THE body of a newborn baby has been found on a footpath in Melbourne's west.

The homicide squad is investigating the discovery and a woman, 18, of St Albans, is assisting police with their inquiries.

A family member reported the death to police about 3pm on Thursday (AEDT).

Officers attended attended a property in Ruth Street, St Albans, and found the newborn's body on a nearby footpath.

Police said the exact circumstances surrounding the death were unknown and a post mortem was expected to be conducted on Thursday night.

Investigators want to hear from anyone who saw unusual activity in the Ruth Street area during the past week to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.


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Sanctions wouldn't affect Sochi: Bishop

ANY potential political actions against Russia would be unlikely to impact upon Australia's paralympians, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop says.

As international outcry continues over Russia's actions in Ukraine, Britain has withdrawn its political delegation from the Sochi Games.

Australian did not send a delegation. However, team Chef de Mission Chris Nunn says the decision was pre-planned and has nothing to do with the current political situation.

Asked on Thursday night whether an Australian boycott was possible, foreign affairs minister Julie Bishop said the government was considering all options in response to the Ukraine crisis.

But whether Australian athletes decided to go to the Games was a matter for them, Ms Bishop added.

"I am aware of the volatility in the situation," she told reporters in Sydney.

"Its very fluid, its a highly charged atmosphere.

"But it is a matter for the individuals to determine with the best advice available to them whether they will participate."

Mr Nunn said the team had magnificent support from the Australian Federal Police.

"They've been advising us all along, and we are absolutely comfortable that we're in good hands," he said.


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NSW man in coma after assault

A MAN is in an induced coma with head injuries after an assault on the NSW Central Coast.

Police were called to a house at Kincumber at 6.15pm on Thursday, with two men reportedly involved in an argument.

Police said the men were sitting outside the Kooronya Road property at the time.

A 47-year-old man was allegedly punched and fell to the ground, striking his head on the concrete.

He suffered head injuries and was airlifted to Royal North Shore Hospital, where he was placed in a induced coma.

Police later said officers arrested a 26-year-old man at a nearby house who was assisting with inquiries.


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P-plater in SA allegedly six times limit

A P-PLATE driver has lost his wheels after being nabbed at six times the legal alcohol limit in suburban Adelaide, police allege.

Members of the public reported the man's driving to police and officers nabbed him driving near Royston Park after 3pm (AEDT).

The Royston Park man, 35, was then taken to the local police station where he allegedly blew a reading of 0.304, despite his P-plater status requiring him to drive without any alcohol in his blood.

The man had his licence suspended for 12 months and his vehicle impounded for 28 days.

He will be summonsed to court at a later date on driving offences.


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Australian tells of detainment in N Korea

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 05 Maret 2014 | 19.19

An Australian man detained in North Korea has recounted "long and gruelling" interrogation sessions. Source: AAP

TWO hours in the morning and two hours in the afternoon.

Australian missionary John Short has revealed detail of his "long and gruelling" interrogation while detained in North Korea for breaches of the country's religious laws.

The 75-year-old was held for 13 days in the capital Pyongyang after being picked up en route to the airport on February 18.

In a statement issued on Wednesday Mr Short said recounting scripture helped him endure the "long and gruelling investigation".

"There were two-hour sessions each morning, which were repeated again in the afternoons," he said.

The keen walker who clocks up an average 5kms a day said his seated confinement was challenging.

"This I found to be most painful physically as an active senior person."

It was also stressful being under constant guard, he added.

When first detained Mr Short said he insisted he was not a spy and did not intend bringing hostilities to North Korea.

He was told that by distributing religious pamphlets at a Buddhist temple and in a crowded train he violated local laws which prohibit the dissemination of religious material, and faced 15 years in prison.

"I confessed that I had knowingly broken the law in what I believed is my God directed duty and as I do in every place and country I visit," Mr Short said.

The non-denominational Christian Evangelist, originally from South Australia, who has lived with his wife in Hong Kong since 1964, thanked his family along with consular officials who helped publicise his case and facilitate his release.

North Korea's official news agency, KCNA, reported that the decision to expel Mr Short without penalty was partly in consideration of his age.


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PM forestry speech provokes Tas backlash

The Tasmanian government and green groups have hit back at the prime minister's plans for forestry. Source: AAP

PRIME Minister Tony Abbott's declaration that too many of the country's forests are "locked up" has met a furious response from the Tasmanian state government and environmentalists.

Mr Abbott told a forestry industry gathering at parliament house they were the "ultimate conservationists".

He announced a new advisory council for the industry, which follows a government decision to push for a wind-back of Tasmania's World Heritage area.

The state's Labor government, which faces the polls in 10 days, says the federal government is putting at risk a peace deal between the industry and environmentalists that took three years to negotiate.

"The Liberals are suggesting by repealing World Heritage and high conservation forests that that will somehow save the industry," deputy premier and forestry minister Bryan Green said in a statement.

"That's rubbish because what chance would Tasmanian timber from those areas ever have of being sold anywhere around the world?"

The World Heritage areas were part of the peace deal, with green groups vowing to end protests against Tasmanian timber products in return.

Wilderness Society spokesperson Vica Bayley, whose organisation is a signatory to the agreement, said the federal government should get behind the deal.

"Well-worn greenie-bashing rhetoric will not fix the problems," Mr Bayley said.

"The Tasmanian Forest Agreement is the best example in the country of environment, industry and union groups rolling up their sleeves to address real issues, and we urge the prime minister to support it.

"Axing the new World Heritage area won't benefit anyone. It won't protect jobs - these rely on the Tasmanian Forest Agreement, it will embarrass Australia and will reignite conflict in the forests."

Tasmania's Liberal opposition, riding high in opinion polls, has vowed to rip up the agreement if it wins the March 15 election.

Federal Greens leader Christine Milne said preserving forests would create more jobs than cutting them down.

"Who in the 21st century would say the environment is meant for man and not just the other way around?" Senator Milne said.


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China premier's 'war' on pollution

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has "declared war" on the country's pollution problems. Source: AAP

CHINESE Premier Li Keqiang says he is "declaring war" on pollution, describing it as a "red-light warning" against inefficiency as he sought to address public concerns on issues from acrid smog to food safety.

China's three decades of rapid industrialisation and urbanisation have transformed its economy, and seen incomes soar.

But they have also brought severe environmental consequences, with the public enraged by cities regularly blanketed in smog, and incidents such as thousands of dead pigs in Shanghai's main river.

In his speech on Wednesday to the National People's Congress, China's legislature, Li described the deterioration of the environment as "nature's red-light warning against the model of inefficient and blind development".

"We will declare war against pollution and fight it with the same determination we battled poverty," said the premier, who took office in March last year.

The government will shut down 50,000 small coal-fired furnaces this year, clean up major coal-burning power plants, and remove six million high-emission vehicles from the roads, he said.

A cap will be put on the country's total energy consumption and measures will be taken to curb water pollution, conserve soil, recover wetlands and restore forests and grassland, he added.

Chinese authorities have repeatedly pledged action to improve the environment in recent months, but experts warn that implementation will be key.

"The fundamental goal of a government's work is to ensure that everyone lives a good life," Li said. "We will definitely enjoy more peace, happiness and prosperity as well as greater development."

The government aims to lift more than 10 million people out of poverty this year, he said, adding that efforts will be made to narrow the income gap and improve social safety nets.

In an apparent response to worries over the country's scandal-prone food industry, Li promised to crack down on the production and sale of counterfeit and shoddy goods, improve safety monitoring systems and introduce tracing mechanisms.

"We will... apply the strictest possible oversight, punishment and accountability to prevent and control food contamination and ensure that every bite of food we eat is safe," he said.


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Referee should be neutral, Burke says

A Labor frontbencher has hinted a level of dissatisfaction with the federal parliamentary Speaker. Source: AAP

A FEDERAL Labor frontbencher has hinted there is community disquiet about the objectivity of parliamentary Speaker Bronwyn Bishop.

Clashes between the manager of opposition business Tony Burke and "madam speaker", as Ms Bishop is referred to in the lower house, have become a common fixture during question time.

Asked about Ms Bishop's style on Wednesday, Mr Burke said there are rules which limit what he can say outside of parliament.

"As a principle I guess the best way to describe it from my end, is: on the sporting field I don't think the referee ought to get involved in the sledging," he told Sky News.

"I think that's the sort of view I hear throughout the community a fair bit too."

Ms Bishop was appointed Speaker when the coalition came into power for the 44th parliament.


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Police excavate driveway in Novy search

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 04 Maret 2014 | 19.19

INVESTIGATORS are excavating a southern Queensland driveway looking for a vehicle believed to be linked to the disappearance of Gold Coast woman Novy Chardon.

Police, including homicide squad officers, will search other areas of the Mt Nathan property over the coming days, looking for evidence relating to the disappearance of the Indonesian-born 34-year-old.

"We're digging up a driveway, and it is connected to the case of Novy Chardon," police told AAP.

"There's meant to be a vehicle that's underground that they're digging up."

Police wouldn't say whose property it was or what the significance of the vehicle was.

But they did say it wasn't the home of her husband John.

Ms Chandon has not been seen since February last year.

A week after she went missing, officers and SES volunteers scoured a quiet semi-rural road that runs behind Dreamworld, not far from the Chardon home at Upper Coomera.

They believe Mrs Chardon's Volvo SUV may have been driven along the road some time between her disappearance and the evening of February 11 when it was found near Nerang railway station, more than 20 kilometres away.

In January it was announced that John Chardon, 66, will stand trial on eight charges of sexual crimes against children, alleged to have occurred between 1998 and 1999.

They include three counts of rape, four counts of indecent treatment of a child under 16 and one count of indecent treatment of a child under 16 in care.

The charges aren't linked to his wife's disappearance, which Chardon said he doesn't know anything about.


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PM welcomes foresters to Canberra

PRIME Minister Tony Abbott has opened parliament's doors to the "frowned upon" forestry industry, saluting them as the nation's "ultimate conservationists".

Mr Abbott announced on Tuesday the government would establish a forestry industry advisory council to be co-chaired by Rob de Fegely, the president of the Institute of Foresters of Australia.

The council was necessary because too little is known about the industry, Mr Abbott told a forestry industry dinner in parliament house in Canberra.

The prime minister was "pleased" foresters were able to attend parliament after many years without feeling like they were in "hostile territory".

"For three years you were officially frowned upon in Canberra because we had a government that was over-influenced by the Greens," Mr Abbott told the 600-strong gathering, which was also attended by Labor ministers.

"I look around and I don't see people who are environmental vandals, I see people who are the ultimate conservationists.

"I want to salute you as people who love the natural world."

Mr Abbott defended the Coalition's decision to remove world heritage listing for 74,000 hectare area of Tasmanian forest earlier this year.

"We have quite enough national parks, quite enough locked-up forests," he said.


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WA government fights hard for shark cull

THE West Australian government has warned it intends to keep the state's controversial shark drumlines in place, even if it loses a legal challenge to the shark catch-and-kill policy.

At a late-night application for an immediate injunction to stop the so-called "shark cull" in WA waters, marine activists Sea Shepherd argued the hastily-implemented policy was illegal and should be immediately halted.

But lawyers for the government argued that even if was proved they had not followed proper procedure to get the policy started, they would simply sign the right papers within hours to keep the dozens of drumlines off Perth and the south west in place.

"This is an important public safety program, and the state does not intend these proceedings to interfere with that," deputy state solicitor Rob Mitchell told WA's Supreme Court.

Judge James Edelman said he intends to make his decision on the injunction with 24 hours.

Lawyers for Sea Shepherd argued the exemptions to state laws, which allowed the protected great white, tiger and bull sharks to be killed, were not published properly.

To illustrate the fierce opposition to the WA policy, Sea Shepherd recruited Sharon Burden, the mother of Kyle, who was mauled to death by a great white shark while bodyboarding off Bunker Bay in 2011.

Ms Burden was in the WA Supreme Court to hear the legal argument for an injunction, which Sea Shepherd believes will force the 60 drumlines to be removed.

Judge Edelman was told there was "genuine urgency" to decide the legality of the shark-kill policy, with Sea Shepherd Barrister Richard Hooker saying the WA government was trying to write it's own rules - and had not played by them.

"The WA government is trying to carve out ... a significant island of immunity," Mr Hooker said.

"If the government takes totally protected fish, like everyone else, it's acting unlawfully."

The WA government has faced vitriolic opposition to the policy since it was announced late last year, with rallies on Perth and south-west beaches, and close scrutiny of the drum line activity.

Dozens of tiger sharks - but no great whites - have been caught by the hooks, with daily photos of captured sharks posted on social media.

Premier Colin Barnett said he was confident the policy would stand up to the legal challenge, which he claimed the government had anticipated.

"The West Australian government is absolutely confident that the policy in place is the right policy and we intend to continue it," Mr Barnett told reporters.

"And that's why we took great care, both in terms of processes at a state level and at a commonwealth level, and we are confident that that is done in the right way."


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Militants storm local council HQ in Iraq

MILITANTS have stormed a government building in a city north of Baghdad, killing at least six people, officials say.

Police officers say two suicide bombers first blew themselves up on Tuesday at the entrance to the local council in Samara, paving the way for five other attackers to storm inside after detonating a parked car bomb.

The officers say security forces quickly arrived at the scene, besieged the building and after a two-hour gun battle, killed all the attackers and freed an unspecified number of people trapped inside.

Among those killed in the attack were three policemen and at least three civilians.

The officials say 34 people were wounded.


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QLD woman charged with attempted murder

Written By Unknown on Senin, 03 Maret 2014 | 19.19

A man is in a serious condition after being shot in the stomach the Lockyer Valley west of Brisbane. Source: AAP

A WOMAN has been charged with attempted murder after a man was found with a gunshot wound in a Lockyer Valley home.

The 26-year-old man was bleeding profusely when he was located by emergency services at a Laidley Heights home on Monday morning, police said.

He was taken to a Brisbane hospital in a serious but stable condition.

Police on Monday night charged a 33-year-old woman, who was earlier speaking to officers, with attempted murder.

She is due before the Ipswich Magistrates Court on Tuesday.

Police wouldn't provide further details.


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Pistorius witness 'heard screams'

A WITNESS in the Oscar Pistorius trial has described hearing "bloodcurdling screams" on the night the Paralympian shot his girlfriend dead.

Michell Burger, who lived on the neighbouring estate to the Silverwoods Estate in Pretoria where Pistorius lived, described hearing a woman screaming followed by four gunshots on the night of model Reeva Steenkamp's death.

Her evidence came on the first day of Pistorius's highly-anticipated trial at the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria today, where the six-times sprint champion formally pleaded not guilty to four charges including the murder of Steenkamp.

Prosecutors allege the 27-year-old shot model and reality TV star Steenkamp, 29, through the bathroom door of his home.

Burger, a neighbour of Pistorius who lives in the Silver Stream Estate, described waking up at around 3am to a woman's "terrible screams".

Speaking through an interpreter, she said: "We woke up from the screams. My husband jumped up and went to the balcony."

Ms Burger told the court it had been traumatic to hear the "bloodcurdling screams", adding: "It leaves you cold."

She said she also heard a man screaming for help, adding: "Three times he yelled for help."

Burger said she and her husband called security at their estate to report the screams and what they thought was a break-in.

She added: "I heard her screams again, it was worse, it was more intense. Just after her screams, I heard four shots, it was four gunshots that I heard."

Asked to describe the successive shots, she said there was a pause between the first and second which was longer between the second and third shots and the third and fourth.

She said: "I told my husband that I do not hope that that woman saw her husband being shot in front of her because after he screamed for help we didn't hear him again."

The start of the trial - which is being watched by the world - was delayed by an hour and a half today as the court waited for Afrikaans interpreters.

The double amputee is charged with the murder of Ms Steenkamp, whom he shot dead at his home on Valentine's Day last year.

Asked how he pleaded, he said: "Not guilty, my lady."

The Paralympic star, wearing a dark suit, white shirt and dark tie, entered not guilty pleas to four charges.

Pistorius, dubbed the "Blade Runner" for his prosthetic legs, admits shooting Miss Steenkamp dead at his home but claims he thought she was an intruder.

In court today, Pistorius, who was supported by family members including siblings Carl and Aimee and his uncle Arnold, came face to face with Steenkamp's mother June, who is attending the trial.

Prosecutor Gerrie Nel told the court: "They were the only two people in the house. There were no eyewitnesses.

"The state's case is based on circumstantial evidence."

He said evidence included what neighbours heard, and prosecutors would argue that "a certain inference" could be drawn from the scene.

"We argue that the accused's version in the bail application and today could not reasonably possibly be true, should be rejected," he said, adding: "The only inference from the circumstantial evidence would be that the accused shot and killed the deceased."

The court was read a statement from Pistorius in which he claimed he mistakenly thought there was an intruder in his home, leading him to open fire in an attempt to protect himself and Steenkamp.

The statement, read by Pistorius's defence lawyer while the athlete remained standing, said the scene had been contaminated and disturbed.

In it, the Paralympian said he did not intend to kill his then-girlfriend that night and they had not argued that night.

He said: "I deny this allegation in the strongest terms because there was no argument. The allegation that I wanted to shoot (or kill) Reeva cannot be further from the truth."


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Govt to repeal Qantas Sale Act

Qantas would face national interest tests even if its ownership laws were repealed says Tony Abbott. Source: AAP

THE federal government has opened the door for Qantas to have more foreign investment but the airline may have to restructure and jobs could go offshore.

Qantas has asked the government to change the Qantas Sale Act to allow more foreign investment arguing the strings attached hampered its ability to compete on a level playing field with its rivals.

Federal cabinet on Monday rejected a debt guarantee sought by Qantas but agreed to repeal part of the Act that stops foreign airlines from holding more than a 35 per cent of Qantas or a greater than 25 per cent stake for any single foreign shareholder.

Mr Abbott said that under the proposed changes, Qantas foreign ownership would be limited still by the Foreign Investment Review Board and the Air Navigation Act.

"They do have to have 51 per cent Australian ownership, they do have to have their headquarters and the substance of their business based in Australia," Mr Abbott said.

Mr Abbott did not say how Qantas could capitalise on the change saying that was up to the airline, which could restructure itself.

He said that under what they are proposing, Qantas' international arm would "remain in every sense" an Australian airline.

"Qantas domestic, should there be a distinction, would remain a substantially Australian airline," Mr Abbott said.

The move means other government owned airlines will be able to take a majority stake in the domestic arm of Qantas for the first time even while foreign ownership of the international arm would have to remain capped at 49 per cent.

Some aviation analysts argue the best option for Qantas would be to split the company into three separate companies: domestic, international and ancillary services such as the Frequent Flyer program and freight.

Mr Abbott said the changes will provide business flexibility for Qantas consistent with other airlines based in Australia.

He conceded that some jobs may go offshore in any restructure.

"If some jobs have to go offshore in order to ensure that Qantas has a strong and viable long-term future, it may be regrettable but nevertheless it is the best way to guarantee Australian jobs for the long term," Mr Abbott said.

The coalition will take legislation to parliament as early as this week and hopes Labor will not prevent the bills from passing the upper house where the government does not have the numbers alone to pass laws.

"I don't believe that even the Labor party as currently constituted is going to stand aside and let Qantas bleed," Mr Abbott said.

But both Labor and the Australian Greens plan to oppose the repeal which means it is unlikely to pass in the Senate.

Labor believes the change will lead to a restructure that would see thousands of jobs going overseas.

Opposition transport spokesman Anthony Albanese said all previous indications from Treasurer Joe Hockey had suggested the coalition was more likely to offer Qantas a debt guarantee than repeal the Act.

"No one who had read the tea leaves ... in the past few months could have predicted that they would attempt to get rid of the entire section of the act," he said.

"Every single principle which makes the flying kangaroo an Australian is gone under this proposal."

The Australian Greens said they don't want to lose a national carrier and see jobs go offshore.

"Tony Abbott is out to kill Qantas as our national carrier," Deputy Leader Adam Bandt said.

Qantas acknowledged the coalition move "would have limited chance of passing through the Senate".

"If this proposal by the government to change the Qantas Sale Act is not passed, we would expect the government and the parliament to consider alternative measures to balance the unlevel playing field in Australian aviation."


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Hundreds protest outside Russian embassy

Members of Sydney's Ukrainian community are protesting outside a Russian embassy tonight. Source: AAP

ABOUT 200 members of Sydney's Ukrainian community have staged a loud protests outside a Russian embassy, calling on Russia's president to "keep his hands" off the troubled European country.

Ukranian, Georgian and European Union flags were waived as the eclectic crowd yelled at the Russian embassy for President Vladimir Putin to "get out" and "keep his hands off Ukraine" on Monday evening.

Banners depicting the ex-KGB hard man with Adolf Hitler's hair and moustache were shaken angrily at the Woolhara unit housing the Russian embassy, after prayers and songs of national pride.

Protester Yuri Mencinsky, who was involved at demonstrations outside the same embassy 40 years ago, told reporters the crowd was shouting "kacapy" - a derogatory Ukranian term for Russians.

Peter Shmigel, the public affairs director for the Australia Federation of Ukrainian Organisations said the international community needed to act, not just talk.

"Action like removal of Russia from the G8 so that it feels the economic consequences of breaking international law," he told reporters at the protest.

"Why should Russian be at the international table if it's operating in an outlaw manner?"

He added that Ukraine was a untied country and that there was no divide between Russian and Ukrainian speaking-citizens.

"That's a mythology," he said.

"Ukraine has been independent for 20 years. During that time there have been virtually no recorded instances of internecine violence between Russian communities and Ukrainian communities."

Russia's annexation of Georgian land in 2008, he added, should serve as a strong warning.

"Mr Putin looks at the world differently than the world looks at him," he said.

"We look at him as a political leader. He looks at us through the lens of a former colonel of the KGB, someone who swore an oath to uphold the USSR."

The protesters said further actions were planned outside the Russian embassy in Canberra.


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