16 Pages Number 159 2st Year
Egypt steps up hunt for stolen Van Gogh painting
Price: Rp 3.000,-
PAGE 6 I
N
T
E
R
N
A
T
I
Monday, August 23, 2010
O
N
A
L
e-mail: info_ibp@balipost.co.id online: http://www.internationalbalipost.com. http://epaper.internationalbalipost.com.
Bali‘s exports to China, Hong Kong constantly increasing PAGE 8
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, leader of the Australian Labor Party waves to the crowd during her post election speech in Melbourne, Saturday, Aug. 21, 2010. AP Photo/Andrew Brownbill
Suspense as Britain bids to save silent Hitchcock thrillers PAGE 12
Australia in political limbo after voters punish PM Agence France Presse
SYDNEY - Australia’s major parties raced Sunday to woo independent lawmakers as the nation faced its first hung parliament in 70 years after voters punished Prime Minister Julia Gillard for ousting her predecessor. The country’s first woman prime minister and opposition leader Tony Abbott scrambled to broker deals to form a coalition government and break the limbo left when electors Saturday stripped Gillard of her right to rule alone. Gillard, who toppled predecessor Kevin Rudd in a brutal party coup just two months ago, was lagging behind
WEATHER FORECAST CITY
TEMPERATURE OC
DENPASAR
23 - 31
JAKARTA
24 - 33
BANDUNG
19 - 29
YOGYAKARTA
22 - 31
SURABAYA
24 - 33
SUNNY
BRIGHT/CLOUDY
RAIN
HOTLINE
For placing advertisment, please contact: Eka Wahyuni
0361-225764
her challenger by 70 seats to 72, with 78 percent of the ballots counted, the ABC network said.With 76 seats needed
to form a government, Australia’s balance of power now lies in the hands of five men — four independent MPs and
a newly elected Greens politician. But the stunning fall from grace of the centre-left Labor Party government has left Abbott’s conservative Liberal/National alliance poised on the brink of power, if he can cobble together a coalition government. “The Labor Party has definitely lost its majority,” Abbott told jubilant supporters late Saturday. Continued on page 6
Tens of thousands evacuated after floods in China, N.Korea Agence France Presse
BEIJING - More than 120,000 people have been evacuated in northeast China following serious floods that have already left four dead and forced the relocation of thousands in neighbouring North Korea. Heavy summer downpours have dangerously swollen the Yalu river, which forms the border between the two countries, and forecasters are warning of yet more torrential rain to come. China’s civil affairs ministry said late Saturday that 127,000 people had been evacuated in Liaoning
province in just three days due to the rains, as the nation struggles with its worst floods in a decade. In Dandong city alone, which borders North Korea, more than 94,000 residents were evacuated and some power and transport links were cut off, the official Xinhua news agency reported. A couple in their 70s and a mother and son died in Kuandian county, around 100 kilometres (60 miles) northeast of Dandong, when flash floods swept away their homes, Xinhua said, citing a local flood control official. Continued on page 6
AP Photo/Xinhua, Yao Jianfeng
This photo released by China’s Xinhua news agency shows the bird’s-eye view of a damaged village after flood in Dandong, northeast China’s Liaoning province, on Sunday Aug. 22, 2010. Flooding has forced the evacuation of 94,000 people in the north China port city of Dandong after heavy rains caused the Yalu river to breach its banks, state media said Sunday.