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/ 30 July 2007

Asean means acronyms for baffled media

There may be "Aida" and even some "Fans" — but the jumble of Asean acronyms isn’t music to anyone’s ears. For the hundreds of reporters who can’t tell their Aasroc from their Elto, the blizzard of bureaucracy at the Association of South-East Asian Nations (Asean) meetings can be pretty daunting.

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/ 30 July 2007

Chemical, glass workers down tools

Fuel supplies may come under pressure because of a strike in the petroleum, glass and pharmaceutical sector, the Chemical, Energy, Paper, Printing, Wood, and Allied Workers’ Union (Ceppwawu) said on Monday. About 280 workers affiliated to Ceppwawu downed tools on Monday after a wage dispute was declared against their employer, said the union’s deputy general secretary.

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/ 30 July 2007

Hundreds dead in China floods

More than 500 people have been killed in the most devastating floods to hit China for a decade, the Red Cross said on Monday, launching an emergency appeal for aid to the millions left homeless. ”Over the past two months, more than 200-million people have been affected and over 500 have been killed nationwide,” it said in a statement.

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/ 30 July 2007

Japan PM to stay after poll defeat, gridlock looms

Hawkish Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe vowed to stay in his post despite a crushing defeat for his ruling camp in an upper house election, but policy gridlock loomed and Abe’s grip on his job was still uncertain. Voters outraged at a string of government scandals and gaffes and the bungling of pension records stripped Abe’s coalition of its upper house majority.

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/ 30 July 2007

Wallabies face bumpy World Cup build-up

The Wallabies’ Rugby World Cup campaign is under threat of being derailed because of a major rift involving the coaching staff, which has prompted the intervention of Australian Rugby Union officials. Also, many senior players have lost confidence in several members of the Australian team management, writes a columnist in the Sydney Morning Herald.

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/ 30 July 2007

Somali Islamists defend insurgency

Somalia’s exiled opposition leaders on Monday lashed out at the international community’s support for the Ethiopian-backed interim government and defended the deadly insurgency against Mogadishu. "The resistance of Somali people is a legitimate response" to Ethiopian occupation, former Parliament speaker Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden said.

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/ 30 July 2007

New Bills await MPs as they return to work

The South African government has tabled six new pieces of legislation to greet MPs as they return from their month-long winter break to start the new term on Tuesday. The Bills, with one exception, are all amendment Bills tidying up earlier legislation or making arrangements to deal with problems that have arisen since the original laws were passed.