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In recent months the Australian government has, rightly, called out human rights abuses in China, Hong Kong and elsewhere, yet its silence on what is a global tragedy involving child abduction in Japan has been deafening. While the Prime Minister has this week been in Tokyo discussing trade and security arrangements, he has not responded to a request from Australian parents to raise the issue of t
After Yuka fled with Sean, in 2010, Daniel Wass tried to contact her by email and phone, and by enlisting mutual friends to convince her to talk to him, but she never responded. (Yuka did not reply to requests for comment.) Wass lobbied his federal MP to explore diplomatic options. He contacted the Australian Federal Police (AFP), the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), and the Austral
Australian father Scott McIntyre freed in Japan after arrest for seeking kids We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later. Dismiss
Final donation for man whose blood helped save 2.4 million babies We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later. Dismiss
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Tokyo: A group of American historians is issuing a call to their Japanese counterparts to remain steadfast in the face of pressure from Shinzo Abe's government to play down the army's use of "comfort women" during World War II. As it prepares to mark the 70th anniversary of end of the war, Mr Abe's conservative government is pushing to put a gloss on Japan's wartime history and, in turn, to loosen
Sex with more than 20 women helps reduce prostate cancer: study We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later. Dismiss
Friday, March 21 or before - Neel Mehta of Google Security discovers Heartbleed vulnerability. Friday, March 21 10.23 - Bodo Moeller and Adam Langley of Google commit a patch for the flaw (This is according to the timestamp on the patch file Google created and later sent to OpenSSL, which OpenSSL forwarded to Red Hat and others). The patch is then progressively applied to Google services/servers a
Man who introduced serious 'Heartbleed' security flaw denies he inserted it deliberately We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later. Dismiss
Alan Turing, who broke Enigma code in World War II, pardoned by Queen over conviction for homosexuality We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later. Dismiss
Try saying this 10 times: the world's most frustrating tongue twister We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later. Dismiss
Leonardo Da Vinci's wacky piano is heard for the first time, after 500 years We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later. Dismiss
Wuhan, China: Thousands of dead fish floating along a 30-kilometre stretch of a river in Hubei province in Central China were killed by pollutants emitted by a local chemical plant, provincial environmental officials said. Environmental protection officials said tests on water taken from the Fu River upstream from the metropolis of Wuhan revealed that extremely high levels of ammonia in the water
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Five copper coins and a nearly 70-year-old map with an ‘‘X’’ might lead to a discovery that could rewrite Australia’s history. Australian scientist Ian McIntosh, currently Professor of Anthropology at Indiana University in the US, plans an expedition in July that has stirred up the archaeological community. The scientist wants to revisit the location where five coins were found in the Northern Ter
THE operator of the Ranger uranium mine expects to take drastic action to prevent radioactive water spilling into an Aboriginal community and Kakadu's World Heritage-listed wetlands. More than 10 billion litres of highly contaminated water is trapped on the mine site 230 kilometres south-east of Darwin after near-record rainfalls. Pitting itself against nature ... the Ranger uranium mine in Kakadu
FOR the first time since World War II, Japan is establishing a secret foreign intelligence service to spy on China and North Korea and gather information to prevent terrorist attacks. The spy unit has been created under the wing of Japan's peak intelligence agency, the Cabinet Information and Research Office, or Naicho. It is modelled on Western intelligence services such as the Australian Secret
AUSTRALIAN spy agencies have intensified secret operations with the US and Japan, seeking to prise sensitive information out of China, North Korea and Iran, according to leaked US diplomatic cables. But the allied intelligence effort has been set back by serious concerns over poor security in Japan for handling secret documents. The insight into co-operation between Japanese, US and Australian int
THE Falcon became a fiery phoenix last night. After a seven-year odyssey in space, the unmanned Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa, or Falcon, burnt up in the atmosphere, making it the first probe to land on an asteroid and return to Earth. But its legacy could live on, perhaps helping protect the planet from asteroid impacts, if dust from the space rock it visited can be retrieved from the spacecraft's
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