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Truck loses asbestos on NSW highway

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 12 Oktober 2013 | 18.16

A TRUCK has lost several tonnes of asbestos before crashing into a guardrail in Sydney's west, police say.

A Mitsubishi tipper truck was driving along the M7 at Eastern Creek on Saturday morning before the crash unfolded.

As it travelled along an off-ramp, the truck allegedly lost a load of asbestos waste, believed to be between three to five tonnes, and crashed into a cement guard rail.

Emergency services closed the off-ramp while the asbestos sheeting was hosed down and contained.

A police spokesman said whether the load of asbestos was secured or not would be part of an investigation.

Police have warned motorists about the dangers of unsecured loads leading to accidents and serious injury.


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'Chopper' Read to have Melbourne funeral

Crime figure turned author Mark "Chopper" Read will be sent off at a funeral in Melbourne next week. Source: AAP

CRIME figure turned author Mark "Chopper" Read will be sent off at a funeral in Melbourne next week.

Read, who died aged 58 on Wednesday after a battle with liver cancer, will be farewelled at a funeral in the inner Melbourne suburb of Clifton Hill next Thursday.

Read spent more than 23 years in jail for crimes including armed robbery, assault and kidnapping, including trying to abduct a Victorian County Court judge at gunpoint.

He once claimed he was involved in killing 19 people and the attempted murder of 11 others.

He was famously portrayed by Eric Bana in the 2000 film Chopper.

Read was also Australia's best selling true crime author, with copies of his first book Chopper: From the Inside selling more than 300,000 copies.


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Severe fire danger forecast in Kimberley

Man trapped as tractor rolls

Man trapped as tractor rolls

A MAN was trapped inside the cabin of his tractor after it rolled on to its roof on a rural road on the Darling Downs.

QLD News

Sally shapes for next title tilt

Sally shapes for next title tilt

GOLD Coast surfer Sally Fitzgibbon vows to make it fifth time lucky after another near-miss on the world surfing stage.

QLD News

Gang takeover inked on bikies' faces

GCB Court

RUMOURS of a takeover of the Finks by notorious overseas outlaw bikie club the Mongols now appear to be written in ink.

QLD News
  • 1 video
    • Military join police in Melbourne biker blitz

Men 'lure and rape' after meeting online

Men 'lure and rape' after meeting online

TWO men accused of arranging meeting with a woman via social media, before abducting her, driving her to an apartment and sexually assaulting her.

News

Legal eagle won't have bar of strip club

Legal eagle won't have bar of strip club

A PROMINENT Queenslander has launched legal action to stop a strip club opening a bar near his house until 5am every day.

QLD News

18.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

German groom leaves bride behind

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 11 Oktober 2013 | 18.16

A GERMAN couple's marriage got off to a rocky start when the groom forgot his bride at a highway petrol station on the way home from their honeymoon, only noticing she was missing after hours had passed.

Police said on Friday the couple was heading home to Berlin from France when the man pulled over near the central town of Bad Hersfeld late on Thursday to fill up their van.

The woman had been sleeping in the back but got up - unbeknownst to the man - to use the toilets and he drove off before she returned.

Only after two and a half hours on the road did he notice she was gone and called police who said she was patiently waiting.

At least it should make his anniversary easier to remember.


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Hundreds to mark Bali bombings anniversary

Would this guy stop your pub crawl?

Would this gargoyle stop you going to the pub?

THIS gargoyle in an Aussie pub is freaking out locals, with some worried the "monster-looking" statue will "come alive" and start attacking them.

Death trap cable banned in Qld

Death trap cable banned in Qld

UPDATE: Faulty electrical cable that could cause fires in Queensland homes has been pulled off shelves and banned thanks to a report by The Courier-Mail.

Mystery of the missing mother

Nobody saw missing mum leave town

FAMILY baffled after a mother-of-three disappeared from a small Queensland community - and nobody saw her leave town.

Noisy 'burglar' with glowing eyes

bandit

A QUEENSLAND family woke in shock to the sounds of someone stumbling around their home - but a pair of glowing eyes revealed the truth about their 'burglar'.


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Sydney city bank robbed on closing

Police are on the scene of a bank robbery at Pyrmont in inner-city Sydney and say no one was hurt. Source: AAP

A SYDNEY city bank has been robbed in broad daylight.

NSW Police say two men held up the Bendigo Bank branch on Harris St at Pyrmont around 5pm (AEDT).

One was armed with a sledgehammer and they made off with a small amount of cash, police say.

A man whose daughter was a witness told Fairfax Radio a car was driving erratically down Harris St before the men got out and went into the bank.

"Next thing they drive up onto the footpath, they back up so the car was ready to get away," he said.

"I think it was three people raced into the bank ... they were only in there for about 30 seconds and they came out and screamed off into the car and nearly knocked over a couple of pedestrians and a cyclist."

Police say a dark blue Subaru WRX was last seen heading south on Harris Street.

No one was injured during the robbery.

The hold-up comes weeks after a Porsche Cayenne ram-raided a CBD bank in the middle of the day.

Three masked men crashed the luxury 4WD into an ATM outside a Westpac bank on Kent Street just before midday on September 13, causing the outer wall to collapse.

Armed with sledgehammers, the bandits then entered the bank through the opening and took money from the tellers.

They escaped in a blue Subaru sedan that was waiting outside with a getaway driver.


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Tassie judo club wants Putin as patron

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 10 Oktober 2013 | 18.16

Russia's president has been asked to become the patron of a Tasmanian judo club. Source: AAP

A JUDO club in Tasmania has written to the Kremlin to ask Vladimir Putin to be its patron.

The Ulverstone Judo Club, in the state's north, says President Putin's prowess in the sport and no-nonsense approach make him the perfect candidate.

"I often say (at the club), look, Vladimir Putin doesn't put up with crap like this," head coach Chris Palmer told AAP.

"He's got plenty of backbone, he makes a decision and away he goes."

Mr Palmer said members of the club came up with the idea when they spotted the Russian president at the world championships in Rio last month.

They wrote to him this week and are hopeful of receiving a reply.

"We've gone to the Kremlin now," Mr Palmer said.

"If we don't do any good with getting a reply ... I'll shoot it back through the European judo.

"We might be able to get something that way."

President Putin began judo as a teenager and holds a sixth 'dan' red and white belt.

He has been the president of his boyhood club in St Petersburg and co-authored a book on the sport.

Mr Palmer, who earned his fifth 'dan' black belt last weekend, said the president's appearances practising judo on TV showed he had a sound knowledge of the sport.

"You can tell straight away that he has done a bit," he said.

"We have kids one night a week, some might do two.

"In Russia you're four nights a week or bugger off."

Mr Palmer said while he admired President Putin's lack of political correctness, he didn't agree with some of his more controversial policies.


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Dead daughter and sick father found in NSW

  • From: AAP
  • October 10, 2013 8:00PM

A WOMAN has been found dead along with her seriously ill elderly father at the NSW Hunter Valley home they shared, police say.


18.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

EU freedom prize awarded to Malala

The EU has awarded a prize for freedom of thought to Pakistani schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai. Source: AAP

THE European Parliament's Sakharov prize for freedom of thought has gone to Malala Yousafzai, the 16-year-old Pakistani advocate for female education who survived a gunshot to the head by the Taliban, lawmakers announced on Thursday.

"Malala personifies the fight for education for girls in areas where respect for women and their basic rights are completely ignored," said EU lawmaker Joseph Daul, the chairman of the European People's Party, the largest group in parliament.

"She is an icon of courage for all teenagers who dare to pursue their aspirations and, like a candle, she lights a path out of darkness," Daul added.

Other nominees included Edward Snowden, the former NSA employee who blew the whistle on US surveillance practices and is now in temporary asylum in Russia, as well as Mikhail Khodorkovsky, a jailed one-time political opponent of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Sakharov Prize will be presented on November 20. Malala is also a favourite to win the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday.

Last year, the EU prize went to Iranian human rights activists Nasrin Sotoudeh and Jafar Panahi.


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Compo offer worthy, Bali victims say

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 09 Oktober 2013 | 18.16

Australian victims of terror attacks and their families are finally set to receive compensation. Source: AAP

A VICTIM of the second Bali bombings hopes compensation for victims of terrorism overseas will help the children who lose their parents.

Paul Anicich was critically injured while with a large group of families from Newcastle when the 2005 Bali bombings killed 23 people including four Australians.

He hopes retrospective compensation for terror victims announced by Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Wednesday will help children impacted by terror attacks.

From October 21, all Australian victims of terrorism overseas since the September 11, 2001 attacks will be able to apply for up to $75,000 in compensation under changes announced by the Abbott government.

Mr Abbott, who was holidaying in Bali in 2005 and helped arrange for Mr Anicich to be airlifted to Singapore for treatment, has long pushed for this compensation and had called for the Gillard government's victims of overseas terrorism compensation scheme to be retrospective.

The retrospective scheme will cover Australians affected by the 2001 attacks on New York and subsequent terrorism in Bali, Jakarta, London, Egypt, Mumbai and most recently Nairobi.

Mr Anicich hopes it helps the children left behind.

"I immediately thought of the then young children who had been left without parents, who were with us in that bombing, and the prospect that there would be some money that could help them along in their lives without parents," he told AAP.

"Even though it is seven years later it will certainly help them."

Mr Abbott fulfilled his pre-election pledge to backdate compensation when he announced the scheme after laying a wreath at the site of the 2002 Bali bombings which killed 202 people, including 88 Australians.

Standing alongside Peter Hughes, who was injured in that first Bali blast, Mr Abbott acknowledged the compensation could not change the past but said they amounted to a "measure of justice" for the victims.

"This is a modest enough acknowledgment of those who have suffered by virtue of the fact that they were Australian," he told reporters in Kuta.

He said the victims were singled out as targets "because they were westerners and their way of life was an abomination to those who wished us harm".

The scheme is expected to benefit about 300 individuals and their families and cost around $30 million, and won't replace existing benefits available to victims.

Ray Mavroudis, whose cousin David Mavroudis died in Bali in 2002, said nothing could restore their ruined lives, but Australians affected by terrorism now at least have the consolation of compensation.

"You never bring the victim back, unfortunately, but it's some sort of consolation to help their families get through it," he said.

Mr Mavroudis said more information should be given to families about counselling services available.

"Money doesn't go that far when it comes to psychological things," he said.

"Their family's lives are wrecked for the rest of their life because they've lost a loved one."

Albert Talarico, the president of the Coogee Dolphins rugby league club when six of their young players were killed in Bali in 2002, said he wasn't sure whether any of their parents would access the payments.

"But ... at least they know it's there, and that's the main thing," Mr Talarico told AAP.


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Chopper's life a "torrid" journey

Lethal fumes over Lions' block play

Leigh Matthews

Andrew Hamilton, Greg Davis UPDATE: AFL icon Leigh Matthews taken to social media to vent his fury about the latest Brisbane Lions boardroom bingle.

Stop taking photos of your food

Stop taking photos of your food

LOOKING at too many pics of good food may spoil your appetite. So before you get snap-happy and Instagram your next meal, read this.

The truth about food at 40,000ft

The truth about food at 40,000ft

THINK airline food is just stodgy meat and veg that blocks you up? Think again. A celebrity chef dishes the dirt on what's really being served in the skies.

Single, turning 30, woman stages fake wedding

Single, turning 30, woman stages fake wedding

TALK about taking control of your own romantic destiny. From the quagmire of crazy bride stories has emerged a story about a woman who got married to, well, herself.

Report labels Aussies richest in the world

Report labels Aussies richest in the world

WE MIGHT cry poor but Australians are the richest people in the world by one measure, according to a new report from banking giant Credit Suisse.


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Swimmer drowns in NSW

A MAN has died after being winched from the water by surf life savers on the NSW far south coast.

Officials say he was one of five swimmers who initially got into trouble near the Bega River Mouth at Tathra around 4.30pm (AEDT) on Wednesday.

Surf Life Saving (SLS) Far South Coast duty officer Andrew Edmunds said three of the group managed to make their way to shore while two others went missing.

One aged 19 was found clinging to a log, Mr Edmunds said.

"A land, sea and air search continued for the other swimmer and he was eventually spotted by police and lifesavers.

"He was winched into the Westpac Life Saver Rescue Helicopter and flown to a nearby oval at the Tathra Country Club."

Emergency services carried out CPR for over an hour but the man, believed to be 19, could not be revived.

Mr Edmunds said the men were swimming at an unpatrolled location.


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No alcohol restrictions after Darwin death

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 08 Oktober 2013 | 18.16

The NT's chief minister says there are no current plans to change alcohol regulations. Source: AAP

THE Northern Territory chief minister says he is not planning to impose any service or licensing restrictions to curb alcohol-fuelled violence in Darwin despite the fatal stabbing of a young man at the weekend.

Josh Spicer, 27, from Palmerston, was killed at about 8pm on Friday night after getting into a fight in the Darwin CBD.

Brian Paul Kelly, 46, turned himself in to police and will face a murder charge in court on Wednesday.

But Chief Minister Adam Giles said the city would not rush to follow those in NSW in imposing restrictions on alcohol.

"We don't want to have any knee-jerk responses," he told reporters on Tuesday.

"It's in everybody's interest that there's a safe environment. If people behave themselves, things will continue the way they are, but if we continue to have ... misbehaviour, government will have to act and get tough on the regulations."

The government was not currently looking at changing alcohol regulations, he said, but was reviewing the criteria for opening hours of licensed venues.

"We don't want to see situations where someone's not coming home at night because they've gotten into a violent brawl," Mr Giles said.

Reduced trading hours, lockouts and restrictions on high alcohol content drinks in the port city of Newcastle in NSW saw a drop in alcohol-related assaults by over a third, while hospital emergency department admissions dropped by a quarter.

According to the NT's most recent crime statistics, alcohol is a factor in almost two out of three assaults.


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NSW Labour Day road toll doubles

NINE people died on NSW roads this Labour Day long weekend, more than double the road toll for the corresponding holiday period last year.

NSW Police say speeding infringements recorded during Operation Slow Down, which ran from midnight Friday until 11.59pm (AEDT) on Monday, were also up on last year's figures.

But only 269 drink-driving charges were laid, a drop of 37 per cent on 2012, even though more breath tests were carried out.

The deaths bring the state's road toll for 2013 to 258, which is down 28 on the corresponding period last year.

"Our goal in every operation of this kind is zero fatalities, so we are disappointed and saddened that nine people have lost their lives in traffic incidents since Friday," NSW Police Traffic and Highway Patrol Commander John Hartley said.

"Our thoughts are with their families."

Assistant Commissioner Hartley said speed played a role in the 410 major crashes reported over Operation Slow Down 2013.

"While police are still investigating the cause of many crashes that occurred over the weekend, I can guarantee speed was a contributing factor in a high number of them," he said.

In one case, about 10.30pm on Monday, a 23-year-old foreign student was allegedly clocked driving 140km/h in an 80km/h zone.

He has had his visitor driving licence suspended for six months.

In another incident, an unlicensed Nowra man was allegedly caught drink-driving a stolen, unregistered and uninsured van.

The 19-year-old was due to face Wollongong Local Court on Tuesday, accused of blowing a 0.130 reading during a breath analysis test.

He's also been charged with taking and driving a conveyance without the consent of the owner, driving without having a licence, using an unregistered registrable car on a road and using an uninsured motor vehicle.


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Debate heats up on British EU membership

A BRITISH exit from the European Union would be "economic suicide," Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg was to tell business leaders on Tuesday, as he warned that pro-Europeans were "being too slow to wake up to the danger ahead."

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Expenses scandal 'levelling score': Joyce

Written By Unknown on Senin, 07 Oktober 2013 | 18.16

Coalition MP Barnaby Joyce says there needs to be reform in claiming travel expenses. Source: AAP

BARNABY Joyce says political opponents are trying to "level the score" after the coalition won the federal election by exposing his past travel claims.

At least three coalition MPs - Mr Joyce, Julie Bishop and Teresa Gambaro - claimed more than $12,000 in travel expenses to return from a lavish wedding in India where they were guests of billionaire Gina Rinehart.

All said they were engaged in overseas study tours in reports on their travel.

Mr Joyce, who is now agriculture minister, says with a change in government critics are just trying to "level the score against the coalition" by bringing up the claims from several years ago.

"That's what happens in politics," he told Fairfax Radio in Melbourne.

"We never did anything illegal. You did everything that you were basically entitled to do."

Mr Joyce said his decision to take a study tour to Malaysia after the Indian wedding actually made it cheaper for the taxpayer since Ms Rinehart paid for half the trip.

He said the department could have also knocked back his claim and not approved his travel expenses.

In any event, he has repaid the money and also reimbursed taxpayers for using public funds to attend the wedding of shock jock Michael Smith in 2011.

"These things obviously happened years ago, not that that's an excuse," he said on Monday.

He said expense entitlements needed more clarity and reform.

"There's a grey area there," he said.

"I can understand why there needs to be a greater oversight about this and I've got no problems about that happening."

Greens Senator Richard Di Natale says his party will introduce a bill for the establishment of a National Integrity Commission when parliament returns.

Under the proposal, an independent parliamentary officer will be appointed to give advice on entitlements.

"We've got a system of entitlements that is very confusing and it allows politicians to exploit it," Senator Di Natale said.

"What we've seen is coalition politicians exploiting the parliamentary entitlements ... effectively ripping off the tax-payer."

Senator Di Natale said the Greens had long pushed for reform in this area.


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NRL Grand Final kicks easy ratings goal

The Roosters NRL grand final win over the Sea Eagles dominated the TV ratings on Sunday. Source: AAP

A BUNCH of amateur singers proved they were no match for professional footballers after the NRL Grand Final crushed The X Factor in the ratings on Sunday.

The Sydney Roosters grand final win over the Sea Eagles on the Nine Network drew an audience of 2.179 million viewers to easily win the overnight OzTAM ratings.

Despite the NRL Grand Final's pull power and Nine dividing its coverage into several segments for ratings purposes, The X Factor still drew big numbers.

The Seven Network talent quest attracted 1.246 million viewers to finish second for the evening and ahead of the NRL Grand Final Entertainment which was was third with 1.233 million.

Nine News (1.148 million) was fourth and NRL Grand Final Presentation (1.032 million) was fifth.

The NRL Grand Final may have won the night but it lost battle of the codes.

The AFL Grand Final between Hawthorn and Fremantle, on September 28, attracted 2.717 million viewers on the Seven Network.


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Kerry assures CEOs on US role in Asia

FILLING in for an absent US President Barack Obama, Secretary of State John Kerry sought to assure Asia-Pacific business leaders that nothing will shake America's commitment to the region and that the current government shutdown in Washington will soon be over and forgotten.

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Prince Harry honours fallen SAS soldiers

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 06 Oktober 2013 | 18.16

Prince Harry has waved goodbye to Sydney following his visit for the International Fleet Review. Source: AAP

PRINCE Harry has honoured fallen SAS soldiers, and comforted their families, as he completed his whirlwind tour of Australia with a brief stopover in Western Australia.

After the fleet and fireworks in Sydney on Saturday, the 29-year-old Prince made his first visit to WA accompanied by Prime Minister Tony Abbott, with his day taken up mostly with a visit to the home of the SAS at the Campbell Barracks in the coastal suburb of Swanbourne.

A quick wardrobe change saw him ditch the dark-blue navy suit he arrived in to don combat fatigues for his meeting with the SAS troops, who have been based in Swanbourne since 1957.

Once there, he met past and present members of the unit, toured the base and joined families of fallen SAS members killed in the line of duty to lay wreaths in their memory.

The commanding officer of the SASR, who is known only as Lieutenant Colonel G to protect his identity, said the prince's visit was an honour and a privilege.

"Prince Harry knows what it means to serve his nation on operations and most importantly what it means to the families of those serving," Lieutenant Colonel G said.

"Families play a critical role for those serving in the SASR and indeed the whole of the ADF, and we are thankful that the families of some of our serving, former and fallen members were able to be here today."

As well as special forces, surfing spots were on Prince Harry's mind during an earlier meeting with WA premier Colin Barnett and his wife Lyn, both avowed royalists.

And landing from Sydney, the premier and the prince spent 30 minutes discussing the state and it's attractions - with the best surfing spot high on the prince's agenda.

"He said it was a short visit because he had to be back to work on Thursday - a delightful young man, full of energy and enthusiastic," Mr Barnett said.

"His query was where is the best surfing spot ... I should have said Cottesloe (where Mr Barnett lives) but I told him Margaret River. He showed close interest in the state and I am sure he would like to have a closer look around in the future."

Despite no official public functions for the prince in WA, a small crowd of well-wishers did gather at the airport to greet the royal, along with a troop of photographers and a helicopter from a local TV network.

Before his departure from Sydney, Prince Harry told reporters Australia already felt like a second home and he was very sad to be leaving.

"I just can't get the time off work these days," he said.

The prince will leave Perth later on Sunday evening en route to Dubai, where he is scheduled to attend the Sentebale 'Forget Me Not' ball on Monday.

Prince Harry was a co-founder of Sentebale - a charity set up to help vulnerable children.


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US raids terror leaders in Somalia, Libya

A Libyan militant leader, wanted by the US, has reportedly been kidnapped. Source: AAP

US forces have struck two militant targets in Africa, snatching a top Al-Qaeda suspect from the streets of Tripoli and launching a pre-dawn raid against an al-Shebab leader's home in Somalia.

In Libya, US forces seized a militant known as Abu Anas al-Libi, a long-sought Al-Qaeda operative indicted in the 1998 bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

A separate raid in the southern Somali port of Barawe failed to capture the senior militant and it was unclear whether he had been killed, but a US official said several Al-Qaeda-linked al-Shebab members had been slain.

It was reportedly "prompted" by the deadly militant siege on a Nairobi shopping mall last month.

The operation in Libya however appeared to be a success.

"As the result of a US counterterrorism operation, Abu Anas al-Libi is currently lawfully detained by the US military in a secure location outside of Libya," Pentagon spokesman George Little said in a statement.

A source close to Libi told AFP he was snatched by armed men in Tripoli.

Libi, who was on the FBI's most wanted list with a $US5 million ($A5.34 million) reward, was indicted in US federal court in New York for allegedly playing a key role in the east Africa bombings.

The attacks left more than 200 people dead.

His capture ended a 15-year manhunt for a key Al-Qaeda operative, who was born under the name Nazih Abdul Hamed Al-Raghie.

It also paved the way for Libi, 49, to be brought to the United States to face trial.

"We hope that this makes clear that the United States of America will never stop in its effort to hold those accountable who conduct acts of terror," said Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday, speaking from the Indonesian island of Bali.

The action should also make clear that "those members of Al-Qaeda and other terrorist organisations literally can run, but they can't hide," said Kerry, speaking during a break from meetings of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.

The US raid took place in broad daylight with the knowledge of the Libyan government, a US official told CNN.

Libyan security services denied the claim, saying they were unaware of any kidnapping or arrest of the man.

According to the indictment, Libi and other Al-Qaeda members discussed attacking the US Embassy in Nairobi as early as 1993, and even took pictures of the mission.

In 1994 Libi allegedly drew up plans to attack the mission as well as a building that housed the United States Agency for International Development, as well as British, French and Israeli targets.

A US official said the operation in Somalia sought to capture a "high-value" al-Shebab leader, and that no US personnel were injured or killed.

The operation marked the most significant US assault in Somalia since commandos killed key Al-Qaeda operative Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan in the same area four years ago.

It followed an attack by al-Shebab gunmen last month on the upscale Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi that left 67 people dead during a four-day siege.

"US personnel took all necessary precautions to avoid civilian casualties in this operation and disengaged after inflicting some Shebab casualties," the official said.

Declining to identify the people who died, the official said that "even in these extreme operational circumstances, the US military is very cautious to minimise civilian casualties."

Leaders of the Shebab in Barawe, one of the few ports left in the hands of the insurgents, said commandos rappelled from a helicopter but failed in their attempt to storm a house belonging to a senior commander.

The SEAL team approached and fired on the unidentified target's seaside villa by sea, according to The New York Times.

Although the al-Shebab leader was believed to have been killed during the assault, the SEALs had to withdraw before they could confirm the kill, a senior US official told the newspaper.

"The Barawe raid was planned a week and a half ago," a US security official told the Times.

"It was prompted by the Westgate attack."

A senior Somali government official told the newspaper that "the attack was carried out by the American forces and the Somali government was pre-informed about the attack."

Al-Shebab spokesman Abdulaziz Abu Musab told AFP that commandos had stormed the beach by boat, but blamed Britain and Turkey.

"The bungled operation was carried out by white people, who came with two small boats from a larger ship out at sea... one Shebab guard was killed, but reinforcements soon came and the foreigners fled," he said.

"Where the foreigners had been, afterwards we saw lots of blood, so maybe we wounded some."


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Keysar Trad tries hand at love poetry

HE shot to prominence defending controversial former mufti Sheik Taj Aldin Alhilali, took on broadcast giant Alan Jones and penned spirited newspaper op-eds in defence of polygamy.

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