THIS MORNING’S FRONT PAGES
POLITICS AND ECONOMICS
Australia
Chinese relations
Beijing bites back over Kadeer visa and iron ore price – Australia’s relationship with China has plunged to a decade low, with Beijing taking a series of tough measures, including cancelling high-level visits, to convey its displeasure with the Rudd government – The Australian
Economic matters
Kevin Rudd blows his own trumpet over global recession – After splashing around the cash Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is now blowing his own trumpet, claiming credit for preventing Australia joining the global slide into recession – Sydney Daily Telegraph
Ken Henry warns of second economic shockwave – The Australian
Treasury boss dampens ‘premature’ celebrations – Melbourne Age
Treasury Secretary Ken Henry warns of second global financial crisis – Sydney Daily Telegraph
Budget retreat for Defence – The guns have fallen silent in Canberra – thanks to the Government’s insistence that Defence find savings of $20 billion to pay for its new ships, submarines and jets – Melbourne Age
Bushfires
Command crisis as Black Saturday infernos raged – the state’s most senior emergency officials have been slammed for failing to protect Victorians on Black Saturday – Melbourne Herald Sun
Commission lays blame on CFA and Brumby – Melbourne Age
Premier John Brumby vows to change stay-or-go policies – Melbourne Herald Sun
Royal Commission backs new warnings on stay-or-go policy – Melbourne Herald Sun
Black Saturday report savages fire authorities – The Australian
CFS chief announced changes to bushfire warning system – Leave and leave early. That’s the best way to survive, the Victorian Bushfires Royal Commission into the Black Saturday tragedy has found – Adelaide Advertiser
Home births
Home births to be outlawed by new maternity laws – Home births would be driven underground by new maternity laws, a Senate committee has admitted. The community affairs committee said that without special insurance, midwives would be unable to legally practice – Melbourne Herald Sun
Opinions
No one will take the blame – Gary Hughes on the bushfire commission report – The Australian
We need a bushfire dictator – Neil Mitchell, Melbourne Herald Sun
Down from the mount, and nudging Mr ‘Don’t Know’ – Annabel Crabb in the Sydney Morning Herald writes how For once, however, question time was not used principally by the Government as target practice on Malcolm Turnbull. Instead, sharpshooter Lindsay Tanner drew a bead on the hulking outline of Joe Hockey, shadow treasurer.
Hindsight has not cleared the vision of an atrocity – Gerard Henderson in the Sydney Morning Herald writers how Balibo presents Gough Whitlam’s Labor government in the darkest possible light. The film’s message is that Whitlam was complicit in Indonesia’s invasion of East Timor and callously indifferent to the fate of the six deceased journalists.
Time to hit the brakes on ETS – Dennis Shanahan in The Australian argues now is the moment for Rudd to defer final consideration of the emissions trading scheme bill until February next year, beyond the UN’s December climate change conference in Copenhagen.
Elsewhere
Afghanistan
Afghans sold out by their ‘saviour’ – When he arrived on the world stage in his coat of many colours in 2001, Hamid Karzai was hailed as the saviour of his traumatised nation. But he is now betraying the ideals for which so much Western blood has been spilled in Afghanistan – Melbourne Age
BUSINESS
Stocks hit despite growth in Japan – Equities in Asia and Europe saw some of their biggest one-day falls since the turnround in the markets in March as investors were jolted by data from Japan. The US suffered its worst loss in seven weeks, with the S&P 500 closing down 2.4 per cent at 979.73 – Financial Times of London
ENVIRONMENT
Climate change set to ‘wipe out species’ – Runaway climate change will see thousands of animal and plant extinctions in Australia and massive changes to the eco-system, a Federal Government report warns – Brisbane Courier Mail
Bye-bye Apple Isle, hello national food bowl – Tasmanian Premier David Bartlett claims he can help deliver food security for the entire nation, with a $400 million plan to “transform” Tasmania into the country’s “food bowl” – The Australian
Labor concession over climate bill – The Government has given the Opposition one concession on the renewable energy target legislation, as both sides move towards a compromise to pass it quickly. But other Opposition demands are still in the balance – Melbourne Age
Flipper handler to expose Japan’s dolphin ‘genocide’ – Melbourne Age
Health warning for Olympic Dam mine expansion – Adelaide Advertiser
Garrett concedes: extinction inevitable – The Environment Minister, Peter Garrett, has warned that money to save endangered wildlife is limited and some species may have to be abandoned when funding decisions are made – Sydney Morning Herald
MEDIA
Kyle and Jackie O broke donation promise to disabled boy’s family – Sydney Daily Telegraph
Website preys on hooked punters – Problem gamblers who search the web for help from Gamblers Anonymous have instead been redirected to big betting agencies, exhorting them to ‘‘place a bet now” – Melbourne Age
Kyle and Jackie O back on air – “I think everyone on the show has learned form this mistake and we’re sincerely sorry and we’ve put everything in place now that we’re confident it won’t happen again” – Sydney Morning Herald
Reader’s Digest to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection – The Australian
LIFE
Ghosts
Ghosts roaming haunted Parliament House – Sydney Daily Telegraph
The drink
Spies to swoop on children’s energy drinks – the state’s most influential parents’ lobby group wants a NSW-wide school ban on the controversial beverages – Sydney Daily Telegraph
Health
Private health numbers on rise – The Australian
Flight to private health insurers – People have flocked to private health insurance in an apparent rejection of the Rudd Government’s ability to fix the public health system and in a bid to escape a new levy – Brisbane Courier Mail
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