THE PICK OF THE MORNING’S STORIES

Rio arrest

090710agechinaChina crisis puts heat on PM Melbourne Age

Uighurs

China vows executions over riot deathsMelbourne Age

THIS MORNING’S FRONT PAGES

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POLITICS AND ECONOMICS

Australia

Rio arrest

China crisis puts heat on PM – John Garnaut, Shanghai, and Paola Totaro, Rome, report in the Melbourne Age that Australia is facing a major crisis in relations with China after Beijing yesterday dug in over its detention of four employees of mining giant Rio Tinto, saying it had evidence they had stolen state secrets.

Beijing linked to Rio arrest – John Garnaut Sydney Morning Herald Correspondent in Shanghai writes that the Rudd Government has no channels for dealing directly with the powerful Chinese spy agency that detained the Australian Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu and three of his senior staff. Beijing is likely to have unleashed its power only after taking into account the repercussions, international experts say.

Who is Hu? A man of integrity – John Garnaut in the Sydney Morning Herald finds it notable that Chinese steel managers spoke up for Stern Hu yesterday even though he stands accused of one of the most serious crimes.

A lack of evidence adds to the mystery – Michelle Grattan observes in the Melbourne Age that it’s easy when you are the Opposition to be hairy-chested about how the strange case of Stern Hu should be handled. And it is tempting when you are the Government to defend a softly softly approach on the grounds that this is the best way to achieve the desired end of helping an Australian citizen.

Spurned Chinalco denies role in Rio arrestSydney Morning Herald

Business world holds its breath over detentions – Malcolm Maiden in the Sydney Morning Herald writes that confusion and not a little fear are abroad in the Australian business community in China after last Sunday’s detention of four of Rio Tinto’s Shanghai-based employees. The affair could take several paths from here and most of them lead to places Rio and the Australian Government do not want to be.

Big risk in nasty business – Greg Sheridan in The Australian says that the arrest and detention in Shanghai of senior Australian Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu represents a grave crisis in Australia’s relationship with China.

Aussie miner Stern Hu a big threat to ChinaThe Australian

Red alert sounds on Rio spy claimsMelbourne Herald Sun

Economic matters

Economy defies doomsayers as slight jobless increase reinforces positive outlookThe Australian

Travellers’ Tales

Kevin Rudd meets Pope Benedict XVI for the love of Mary MacKillopMelbourne Herald Sun

For Pope Benedict, Kevin Rudd brings an apology and a crate of wine – The Australian

Leadership

New Liberal Leader Redmond: I’m not softAdelaide Advertiser

Law and order

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Young Aborigines 26 times more likely to be jailed in NSWSydney Morning Herald. The Australian Institute of Criminology report on which the story is based can be found here.

090710ntnewshoonsFirst hoon law car seized – Northern Territory News

Help me save my hoon son, David, says Anne ClearyMelbourne Herald Sun

Toughest principal gets results on school violence – Brisbane Courier Mail

Employment

Women make jobs gains while men lose outMelbourne Age

Laid-off hit hard in last days of WorkChoices – Melbourne Age

Unemployment rate hits 5.8 per cent in June – Adelaide Advertiser

Pre-selections

Libs sound out Brogden over challenge to Bishop – Former NSW Liberal leader John Brogden has been approached by members of the party’s moderate faction to challenge Bronwyn Bishop for preselection for the federal seat of Mackellar at the next election – The Australian

Boat people

Frantic quest for asylum-seekers – Australian officials were last night frantically trying to ascertain the fate of up to 74 asylum-seekers aboard a stricken fishing boat, after Foreign Minister Stephen Smith conceded reports that the Indonesian navy had rescued the boat were wrong – The Australian

Education

Nelson defends school league tables – Former federal Liberal leader Brendan Nelson has attacked opponents of league tables such as his NSW party colleague, Opposition Leader Barry O’Farrell, for condemning children from poorer backgrounds to “a life of mediocrity” in the belief they are unable to excel at school – The Australian

Opinions

Junk the jihad, it’s jargon we need – Richard Ackland in the Sydney Morning Herald takes the mickey out of a “national roll-out of a project to promote the consistent use of language in engaging with communities on national security issues”.

Politicide or politic: Gillard and the Gaza muzzle – Jake Lynch in the Sydney Morning Herald says Julia Gillard’s don’t-mention-Gaza stance puts Australia further into Israel’s camp than any other country, including the United States.

PM seeks political gain from higher power – Lobbying on behalf of our Mary is all in a day’s spin for Kevin Rudd says Michelle Grattan in the Melbourne Age

The book price row rings too sadly familiar – Mark Seymour writes in the Melbourne Age that this championing of the rights of the consumer is grasping self-interest.

Tyranny of expectations – Dennis Shanahan writes in The Australian how the Prime Minister, Treasurer and Workplace Relations Minister are faced with a battle to reconcile those expectations with reality, one made economically difficult by the advent of the global financial crisis and the government’s response to it.

Doing less badly than expected – a new confidence is firming in official circles that the economy is not falling away sharply but instead is tracking above the official recession forecasts from both the Treasury and the Reserve Bank writes Michael Stutchbury in The Australian

Teacher unions hold future to ransom – Michael Costa in The Australian writes that the disproportionate and hysterical campaign being run by teachers unions against the federal government’s modest attempts to reform Australian education shows how unreasonable and reactionary teachers unions have become.

Elsewhere

Uighurs

Hu Jintao vows hard line to quell riotingThe Australian

Exile in the U.S. Becomes Face of Uighurs – As the global face of resistance to what she calls the worsening Chinese repression of the Uighurs, Rebiya Kadeer is displaying the tenacity and sense of destiny that drove her improbable climb inside China in decades past, from laundry girl to famed business mogul – New York Times

Uighurs lying low in brave new world – David Brophy writes in The Australian that for Uighurs across the world, the crackdown will only confirm what many have long felt, that their homeland is under a military occupation.

Iran

Iran Security Forces Move to Crush Renewed Street ProtestsNew York Times

Iraq

Bomb Attacks in Iraq Kill at Least 41 – the worst violence since Iraq celebrated the withdrawal of American troops from cities and towns last month – New York Times

Foreign affairs

UK envoy resigns over Russian sex tape – A British diplomat in Russia has resigned after a video allegedly showing him having sex with two prostitutes was posted on the internet – London Times

Economic matters

Stimulus and rate cuts propping up world economyThe Australian on the latest IMF survey

Opinions

Kick the children out: it’s their only hope. Melanie Reid in the London Times describes as transgressive madness yesterday’s bright idea, floated by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, that there should be a lot less leaving home in the future. Under a “no-fee degrees” scheme, university students in England would be spared £3,225 for tuition if they opt to live at home. Ms Reid argues that if we let students stay at home, we are guaranteeing the end of the human race within a few generations

BUSINESS

ANZ primed for buyingMelbourne Age

Gilts fall after Bank signals no extra QE – UK government bonds sold off sharply on Thursday after the Bank of England disappointed investors by failing to increase its quantitative easing programme – Financial Times of London

ENVIRONMENT

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Rudd cool on G8 greenhouse pledge – saying it would mean little unless a deal could be reached with developing countries such as China and India, which criticised the plan yesterday – Sydney Morning Herald

PM Kevin Rudd warns world on climate change The Australian

Symbolic pledge on climate cutsMelbourne Age reports agreement by eight industrialised powers that global warming should be limited to 2 degrees has been undermined by their inability to convince developing nations to support the aspirational target.

Nathan Rees caught out by bottled water contract – Premier’s bottled water ban has been exposed as policy-on-the-run after the discovery that much of it cannot be implemented until 2011. Up to three companies are contracted to supply government departments with bottled water until March 2011 in a contract that industry insiders say is “rock-solid” – Sydney Daily Telegraph

Swire shipping boss wipes hands of oil spill bill – Brisbane Courier Mail

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Compulsory water recycling for new estates in SA – Adelaide Advertiser

MEDIA

Murdoch newspapers shell out $2m to conceal use of criminal methodsSydney Morning Herald

Cameron backs aide over News Corp. call hacking claim – Melbourne Age

Stokes buys a seat at Packer’s media tableSydney Morning Herald

LIFE

090710sunheraldmacattackObesity

Royal Children Hospital doctors split over burger giant – the Melbourne Herald Sun reports that staff are split over whether McDonald’s should continue to have a fast-food outlet at the new Royal Children’s Hospital. Some doctors on the front line in the fight against child obesity are strongly opposed to a fast-food store in the $1 billion hospital’s shopping and entertainment mall. Others say fast-food outlets such as McDonald’s provide a much-needed distraction for sick children, which is acceptable in moderation.

‘Low-fat’ can mean higher calories – says SA academic – Adelaide Advertiser

The drink and other drugs

Patients at risk as drug and alcohol services cut: staffSydney Morning Herald

The long, long dry: less drink, more drugs – Australia’s extended drought is having a severe impact on the mental health of farmers and their partners – but they are not turning to alcohol to drown their sorrows – Melbourne Age

Overhaul for anti-doping agency – Australia’s world-renowned anti-doping agency is so distracted by internal power struggles that the federal government has decided to purge its senior management and come up with a new organisational structure – The Australian

Cricket

The market has declared the draw the winner from day two of the Cardiff Test between England and Australia. On our Crikey Cricket Indictor the probabilities about the result now are:  England 8%, Australia 29% and the draw 63%

Cycling

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Motor sport

Ferrari or bust, says GP chief – Melbourne’s ormula one chief, Ron Walker, has threatened to pull the pin on the Albert Park Grand Prix if Ferrari is not on the starting grid next year – Melbourne Age

Swine flu

Swine flu threat to wipe out workforceSydney Daily Telegraph