Edisi 25 Juni 2010 | International Bali Post

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16 Pages Number 119 2st Year

12 killed as train hits pedestrians in Spain

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Oscar organizers ponder earlier show time

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Plane crash in Ngurah Rai Airport There were no victims MANGUPURA – The head of Indonesian army for Bali and Nusa Tenggara area, Rachmat B and pilot Andi Wijanarko, were escape from a plane accident which happened on Thursday, June 24th 2010. Rachmat was ejecting from the airplane using the ejection seats so he and other officers on board were safe. The accident happened when the plane was trying to land but suddenly the plane was on fire and crash. The people on board were ejecting from the plane and used their parachutes. The commander in Ngurah Rai Airport, Aldrin P. Mongan, said that the department can not determine the cause of the accident. Continued on page 6

BP/Eka

The picture show the wrecked airplane which crashed on Ngurah Rai airport on Thursday, June 24th 2010.

Australia gets its 1st female PM as Rudd ousted

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Associated Press Writer

CANBERRA, Australia – Australia’s ruling Labor Party ousted Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on Thursday in a sudden, stunning revolt that also delivered the country its first female leader.

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Friday, June 25, 2010

Balinese classical dance to enter UNESCO inscription

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Rudd’s deputy, Julia Gillard, was elected leader in an uncontested vote about 12 hours after she surprised many colleagues by challenging a prime minister who until recently had been among the country’s most popular. Rudd was one of the West’s few Chinese-speaking leaders and helped broker the Copenhagen climate change agreement, but his quick removal showed his party had lost faith he could win a second term in national elections due within months. Many foreign policies, including Australia’s 1,500strong military contribution to the war in Afghanistan, are not likely to change under Gillard. But the leadership change immediately eased hostilities between the government and big mining companies over a proposed tax on so-called super profits from burgeoning mineral and energy sales to China and India.

Gillard quickly ended an advertising campaign that promoted the tax, keeping a Labor promise that Rudd broke to never use taxpayers’ money for political advertising. The world’s biggest miner, BHP-Billiton, responded by suspending counter-advertising that claimed the new tax would cost jobs and investment in the mineral sector, which is driving Australia’s economic growth. Gillard said her government is willing to negotiate on the proposed tax. Opinion polls show the tax debate is doing increasing harm to the government’s re-election chances. “I have said to the mining companies of this nation publicly that the government is opening its door, and we are asking them to open their minds,” Gillard told Parliament. Rudd rode high in opinion polls until he made major policy backflips, including shelving plans in April to make Australia’s worst polluters pay for their carbon gas

emissions. An airplane towed a banner over Parliament House on Thursday which made an apparent reference to the backflip: “Julia aim higher on climate.” But Gillard has not committed to pressing ahead with the government’s so-called emission trading scheme in which polluters would buy and trade permits for every ton of carbon gas they produce. The Senate has twice rejected the legislation. She said that as prime minister she would seek a community consensus on how carbon pollution should be priced. An emotional Rudd, flanked by his wife and three children, gave his final speech in the prime minister’s court yard at Parliament House on Thursday, saying he was proud that his first act in government in 2007 had been to ratify the Kyoto protocol for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. “I’m proud of the fact that we tried three times to get an emissions trading scheme through this Parliament, although we failed,” Rudd told reporters.”I’m less proud of the fact that I have now blubbered,” he joked, as he struggled to contain his tears. Continued on page 6

AFP PHOTO / POOL / Alan PORRITT

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard gestures during House of Representatives question time at Parliament House in Canberra on June 24, 2010. Welsh-born lawyer Julia Gillard became Australia’s first woman prime minister after the once hugely popular Kevin Rudd fell to a party coup less than three years after taking office.


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