A review of events and their interpretation.
Fish(1st) The federal fisheries minister, Herb Dhaliwal, has outlined plans for the introduction of a new framework for the Atlantic fishery. This follows a controversial Supreme Court of Canada decision on native fishing. It allows some bands to fish year-round, without licences. Lengthy consultations are planned to bring the new plans into effect. But Dhaliwal says he's aware that an interim agreement needs to be reached to deal with immediate concerns. Dhaliwal says the plans may impose catch limits and will ensure that conservation is not affected. He says he also wants to ensure that only those bands covered in the treaty will be fishing under the agreement. A spokesman with the Maritime Fishermen's Union says he doesn't think an interim plan will work very well. |
Crash(5th) Thirty people die as two commuter trains full of passengers ran into each other at Ladbroke Grove, near Paddington station in northwestern London. It happened during the morning's rush hour period. Hours after the collision, rescue crews were still trying to free some passengers trapped in wrecked train cars. Several cars were knocked off the tracks and one caught fire. More than 160 people were hurt in the crash, caused by a train running a red light and poor track layout. |
Pakistan(12th) A military coup in Pakistan topples the government of Nawaz Sharif. Hardliners assume power, in a move that increases tension in the region. UN leader Kofi Annan "deplores" the coup, and the military doesn't make it clear how the country will be ruled. |
Unrest(1st) A dozen gunmen invade the Burmese embassy in Bangkok, holding as many as 30 people hostage. They were in the embassy applying for visas for Burma. The hostages are freed within hours, and the gunmen - Burmese students supporting human rights abuses in their home country - end the situation peacefully the next day. |
Politicing(10th) Peter Meddlesome Is Back! The man who resigned from the Cabinet last December in a financial scandal comes back as Northern Ireland minister. The Unionists are happy, the Nationalists less so. Mo Mowlam moves to become Minister For Spin, replacing Jack Cunning, who leaves the cabinet. Geoff Hoon becomes Defence Secretary, as George Robertson becomes head of NATO. Frank Dobson leaves Health to be a candidate for London mayor; he's replaced by Alan Milburn, the Treasury minister. Andrew Smith replaces him in turn. (12th) In a US court, cigarette manufacturer Philip Morris admits its products are unsafe. The move opens the way for massive punitive damages. (14th) Chile makes a formal request to Britain to free former dictator Augusto Pinochet for health reasons. The 83-year-old was arrested in Britain a year ago and is now appealing a decision by British courts to extradite him to Spain to stand trial on charges of torture. The British government has denied it has received a formal request but has confirmed that Prime Minister Blair received a letter from Chilean President Eduardo Frei last week. Pinochet has diabetes and a pacemaker. (22nd) An EU report confirms French farmers feed their animals sewage. The gross revelation, confirming France is violating all known hygeine standards, comes as pressure grows on the nation to resume imports of the safe(r) British beef. In retaliation, a number of British stores are stripping their shelves of French produce. The UK government declines to impose a unilateral ban on French food, but the EU may slap one on next week anyway. |
The Rest Of The News(1st) Japanese authorities investigate the accident Sept 30 at a uranium processing plant. Radiation levels were 15,000 times higher than normal after a chain reaction started inside the plant. An order confining people who live within ten kilometres of the plant to their homes has been lifted. |
Cricket(1st, Nairobi Cup Game 6) India 277/6 (Ganguly 139, Whittall 3/55) Zimbabwe 170 (Johnson 52, Flower 38, Chopra 4/29) India win by 107 runs and will meet South Africa in the final. Sharjah Trophy(13th) Sri Lanka 178 (Kaluwitharana 36, McLean 2/40) West Indies 181/7 (Adams 74*, Vaas 2/22) WI win by 3 wickets with 4 balls in hand.(14th) Pakistan 260/5 (Saeed 72, Inzamam 71) West Indies 130 (Abdur 2/25, Powell 36) Pak win by 130 runs with 15.2 overs remaining. Australia -v- Zimbabwe(21st, Bulawayo) Australia 303/6 (M Waugh 106, Ponting 67, Martyn 57*) Zimbabwe 220 (Johnson 110) Australia wins by 83 runs Tests(30 Sep - 4 Oct, Colombo, 3rd Test) Aus 342 (Ponting 105*) Sri Lanka 61/4 (Fleming 3/14) Match drawn; Sri Lanka win series 1-0. |
Sports(19th) Atlanta and the NY Yankees will fight out this year's World Series. The Yanks have seen off Texas and Boston in short order; Atlanta has been given a rougher ride by Houston and the NY Mets. |
Football(2 - 4th) Chelsea storm past Man United 5-0, closing the gap at the top by 76 points. West Ham upset Arsenal 2-1. Sheffield Wednesday get their first win of the season, downing Wimbledon 5-1. A bad day for North London, as Spurs fall to Leicester 3-2. Newcastle overcome local rivals Middlesborough 2-1. Sunderland win 4-0 at Bradford. Everton and Coventry; Villa and Liverpool; Derby and Wimbledon draw. Leeds beat Watford. European(9 - 10th) 1: Italy was held 0-0 in Belarus, but the point gives them the group win; Denmark runners-up. |
Passages(3rd) Akio Morita, co-founder of Sony and the man who gave the world the Walkman, dies aged 78. Responsible for some of Sony's most successful innovations and its marketing brains, Morita was a high-profile envoy for Japan at the peak of its global presence in the 1980s. He was born the heir to one of Japan's oldest sake-brewing families. Morita declined to take over the family business and, together with inventor Masaru Ibuka, in 1946 founded the firm that was to become a world electronic and entertainment giant. First called Tokyo Tsushin Denki, the company was rechristened "Sony" - from the Latin "sonus" for sound - in 1958. (19th) Communist Chinese leader Jiang Zemin visits the UK. He is royally snubbed when Prince Charles declines an invitation to date his concubine, Camilla Parker-Horse. The British tradition of peaceful protest, aged 784. The tradition, weak for a number of years, is killed in Central London when police snatch banners from protestors of the Communist Chinese visit. |
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oct 31 99