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Butane could be the villian

Butane gas and aircraft do not mix. I can recall doing a Unit Emplaning Officers’ course whilst in-service and being told the story of a bic lighter sitting on the dash of a Hercules long enough to heat up, explode and cause sufficient damage to bring down the aircraft. I also remember being in a Herc one day when the Loadie discovered a butane bottle in someone’s kit. With drama worthy of a career in Hollwood he raised the rear gate and threw the offending item out at 30,000 feet.

Thinking about that now, I wonder where it landed? Hope we were over desert or somewhere similar……still.

Whatever, this article from the SMH raises the issue again. Butane could be the villian with the Sea King choper crash in Nias, Indonesia last year.

TEN canisters of highly flammable liquid butane gas found in the wreckage of a Sea King helicopter that crashed on the Indonesian island of Nias last year could have been taken on board by an aid worker, an inquiry into the accident has heard.

Counsel assisting the inquiry, Lieutenant Stephen Harper and Lieutenant Matthew Vesper, yesterday began investigating the role of an Australian aid worker, Frank Tyler, who was picked up on Nias with his interpreter on the morning of the accident.

Mr Tyler wanted the Sea King’s assistance to get to Teluk Dalam, where more than 100 casualties had been reported. A number of boxes which Mr Tyler wanted transported were also loaded onto the Sea King. But instead of flying direct to Teluk Dalam, the helicopter flew back to the Kanimbla.

There the boxes were unloaded and stored in a hangar on the ship for 2½ hours before being placed back on the Sea King later that day for the flight to Teluk Dalam.

It was on that flight that the crash occurred. In between, there had been a crew change on the Sea King, known as Shark 02.

Who signed off on the load list for the second flight, I wonder?

Not good.

UPDATE: Just to clarify my position; I’m not suggesting the butane had anything to do with the crash but could well have caused loss of life subsequent to the impact and resultant fuel ignition.

AWB Fiasco III

Greg Sheridan in the Australian.

I THINK it’s time we all took a cold shower on AWB (formerly the Australian Wheat Board) and its participation in the Iraq oil-for-food scandal. According to the Volcker inquiry, about 2253 companies from 66 countries were involved in paying kickbacks to the Saddam Hussein regime as part of their trade under oil-for-food.

My thoughts exactly. If you do business in this part of the world you pay bakshees. If you don’t pay you don’t sell. Would ‘Tricky’ Rudd or Beasley have compensated the thousands of Australian wheat growers for loss of sales if the crop stayed in the bins?

No way.

Australians see that it’s all about the ALP trying to score a strike against the government; that the government most probably didn’t know about the details of the case and that after all, the AWB did what it was chartered to do – sell the wheat crop in extremely difficult circumstances. As well as getting money to the wheat growers for their efforts they most probably saved lives in Iraq. Kids had food for a change.

I guess that in the total absence of any coherent policies the ALP can not hope to win power; they can only hope to bring the government down by a technicality.

The broader question of corruption is very slippery. When people are accused of corruption, this normally means acting dishonestly, stealing money for themselves. Many people connected to the UN, such as Kofi Annan’s son Koji, made a lot of money personally through oil-for-food. No one is alleging that folks at AWB were improperly pocketing money themselves.

It’s not about the AWB, they are just the catalyst for the ALP to attack. There will be any amount of Australian companys who will have paid ‘fees’ to get goods over the wharves in Indonesia, through customs in some South African excuse for a country or even into a European market. It just happens and the only difference is the actual word used to describe the ‘fees’. In fact, if any company tells you they don’t pay ‘fees’ to get goods into Indonesia I would say they are telling porkies.

The ABC, SBS and ALP should get over it and start acting as a constructive opposition. There are plenty of bills to debate and the AWB will not cost Howard any votes.

Abu Hamza guilty…looking at life

Good news from London.

Abu Hamza, the Muslim cleric whose fiery rhetoric has become synonymous with Islamist extremism in Britain, today faced life imprisonment after being found guilty of inciting his followers to murder.Egyptian-born Hamza, 47, was convicted of 11 of 15 charges of using his position as spiritual leader of the Muslim community in North London to become, in the words of the prosecution, a recruiting sergeant for terrorism.

His counsel argued that Hamza’s speeches may appear deeply offensive at times but offensiveness did not make them a crime.

Yeah…right.

And when he’s finished in Britain, the Yanks want a piece of him for trying to set up a “terrorist training camp” in the state of Oregan.

UPDATE: Abu gets seven years

The judge said that in handing down a seven-year sentence he was aware that upon release Abu Hamza was likely to be rearrested and extradited to the United States where he faces serious terrorist charges, including conspiracy to take hostages. 

That should see him out of the picture for a while.

Beazley and Downer on cartoons

OPPOSITION Leader Kim Beazley has condemned the publication in Australia of controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed.

Mr Beazley said he believed publishing the caricatures was “extremely unwise”.

“It’s an offensive cartoon and it shouldn’t be printed,” he said.

I’m sure he meant to say they are offensive cartoons.

Brisbane’s Courier-Mail newspaper has published one of the 12 cartoons, while political commentator Tim Blair has posted all 12 on his website.The cartoons, which were first published in Denmark, have sparked violent protests around the Muslim world.

Downer says;

“I see the cartoons they produce of me and John Howard and so on and they’re usually incredibly offensive but that is just the nature of our society.”

“I think around the world people have got to learn that not everybody needs to agree with them or have the same interpretations that they have of events or people, and they need to demonstrate a higher degree of tolerance.”

Mr Beazley also has condemned the global violence over the cartoons, as “absurd and disproportionate”.

It might be procative to publish the cartoons but the alternative is to be seen as buckling under fatwas and only printing in our media what these 7th century zealots authorise.

Not this little black duck.

Meanwhile, Al JAzeera reports that Iran is planning a series of Holocaust cartoons in retaliation

Iran’s largest selling newspaper has announced it is holding a contest on cartoons of the Holocaust in response to the publishing in European papers of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.

When no Mosques are destroyed, no riots eventuate, no Iranian flags burnt and no threats made they are going to appear stupid.

So stupid in fact that they won’t even realize it.

Latham plumbs new depths

MARK Latham, who led the ALP to the last federal election, has been charged with assault and stealing after a scuffle with a newspaper photographer.

The photographer wasn’t injured but Latham took his camera and dissassembled it under the age old mechanic policy “If it doesn’t work, hit it harder with a hammer”

Life would be much sweeter for the ALP if they could just convince Latham and his ‘Dad’ Whitlam to go live elsewhere…anywhere but here.

From Tim Blair

A bizarre footnote to the charging of Mr Latham was the appearance in the driveway of his home of a mask of a bearded man atop a white sheet. The apparent effigy was taken down on Monday afternoon.

Oh; the embarrassment of it all.

Agendas everywhere

Because I read a hard copy of the Australian everyday I was beginning to believe the entire news of the world centrered around the AWB Cole enquirey. Under the guise of reporting on the AWB fiasco the Australian neatly encapsulates all the agendas of the main players.

The US, for example are busy trying to get rid of the single desk aspect of the AWB because it is simply too efficient. Their agenda is to open up markets for their own wheat growers and they are simply cashing in on the fiasco. They couldn’t give a shit about paying ‘fees’ as they do it all the time; if not with wheat, then with other commodities. Every world trader has to do it if they seek markets in the third world.

Read this piece and tell me I’m wrong. The US also have problems with the Canadian Wheat Board and continually (10 times in 14 years) make complaints to the WTO about their sales.

In February 2004, the World Trade Organization cleared the CWB of American accusations of unfair trade practices. The CWB called it a victory for western farmers. The WTO ruling was the 10th time in 14 years that trade rulings have backed the CWB.

From my point of view anything the US raises or, what might be more relevant, any quote the Australian journalists solicit from US players, has some element of self interest involved.

The ALP, reported as highly excited at the chance to develop some cracks in the Government’s armour, have developed a sudden interest in what Saddam was doing with his ‘fees’.

As the scandal escalated yesterday ahead of the return of federal parliament this week, Labor foreign affairs spokesman Kevin Rudd questioned whether any of the kickback money was paid to families of suicide bombers, prompting an angry response from Mr Downer.

This from a party who argued against getting rid of Saddam right from day one. The ALP policy was to leave Saddam in place where, presumably, he would’ve continued to pay money to suicide bomber’s familys ad nauseum.

The ALP agenda is very clear. Take advantage of the fiasco and do everything within their power to keep the pot boiling. That’s fair enought too as they are the opposition (sometimes) but readers must keep in mind that the whereas the ALP’s agenda is clear and predictable, their policy on Iraq is anything but. Kevin Rudd’s incessant yapping at everything he sees or hears is becoming boring.

I once owned a toy pomeranian I called Tricky after an animal in All Creatures Great and Small, an ABC show about a Vetinarian somewhere in England. Tricky didn’t know enough to shut up and would yap relentlessly at the docile Alsation on the other side of the picket fence; presumably, just because it was there. I would pick up this little yapper that was as big as a shoe box and show her the Alsation over the fence pointing out that the target of her yapping was about ten times as big, wasn’t threatening her territory and she should just shut the hell up. She just went on yapping and the Alsation just sat and stared uncomprehendingly at the noise.

Kevin ‘Tricky’ Rudd to a tee.

The wheat growers themselves also have some dissent amongst their members but this is really only based on whether we should have a single desk wheat sale corporation or not. Their agenda is driven by perceived profits under one or the other system. If the grower is in the anti-single desk faction he will complain long and loud about ‘fees’ paid to Saddam. If he is in the other camp he will say it’s a part of doing buisiness in the Middle East and after all the AWB is charged with selling our wheat in a combative market.

The agenda of the Australian is less clear. Looking at other newspapers in Australia I find a variation of news items on the front pages. Even the Age, quick as anyone to sink the boot into the Howard government, features an articles on the Muslim reaction to the cartoons, the abortion pill debate, local police commissioner news and doesn’t even rate the AWB fisco in the’Other top stories’ section.

The SMH is similar, The Courier Mail mentions the issue but not as a leader.

The Australian? Well the leader is ‘New blow to PM’s defence’ followed by the second lead story about the US and their previously mention agenda.

The ‘blow’ is anything but and who cares what the US competition thinks?

The government have had to be quiet in the public arena to avoid legal issues with the enquiry but no such restraint will be present when parliament resumes. Look for an attack on the ALP’s inconsistency on all aspects of Iraq in the ensuing week.

Fires unearth forgotten Aboriginal settlement

AN extraordinary discovery of Aboriginal stone houses in southwestern Victoria appears to confirm that some of Australia’s first inhabitants lived in settlements, not just as nomads.

Should this prove to be true then it’ll rewrite what we know of the original Aussies but I do think Matt Butt, the Winda-Mara Aboriginal Corporation’s land management supervisor, is stretching things a bit when he says;

“This is very early aquaculture,” Mr Butt said. “People talk about the Egyptians 3000 years ago, but this is something else.”

It is something else, Matt and further study could prove interesting, but the pile of stones pictured in the Australian aren’t quite up to pyramid standards.

7th Century Q & A

From Arab News
Q. May I ask whether it is permissible to read the Qur’an without having performed ablution or wudhu?

The answer, whilst putting several scholars points of view, settles on this answer.
….. reading the Qur’an is a more involved task than holding it, and there is no disagreement among scholars that while it is better to have ablution before reading the Qur’an, it is permissible to read it without ablution.

Or thinking, as reader HRT suggests.

I’m not normally one to denigrate or redicule religion per se but for an article of this nature to be published in a major daily Arabian newspaper is akin to the Australian telling Catholics how to accept the host at Holy Communion.

They still have a long way to go.

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