2015년 1월 15일 목요일

Morning Mail: Charlie Hebdo new edition, Newman would lose Queensland seat, Boko Haram

Guardian Australia's Morning Mail
Wednesday 14 January 2014
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Charlie Hebdo new edition

 Filipino Muslims burn images of Charlie Hebdo magazine and Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu in Marawi. Photograph: Jeoffrey Maitem/Getty Images 
Muslim leaders have appealed for calm as the new edition of Charlie Hebdo hit the streets, as a 
Charlie Hebdo poster was burned during a protest in the Philippines amid global Muslim protests, and Turkey says it will block pages on the internet that feature the front cover.

The print run for Charlie Hebdo was raised to 5m copies after people queued before dawn at kiosks across France that sold out in the clamour to get a copy of the first edition since the attacks.
Charlie Hebdo sells out - in pictures, and you can get a copy of Charlie Hebdo, if you're ready for a bidding war on eBay, and in Israel an ultra-orthodox newspaper edited Angela Merkel out of their front page picture of the Paris march.
Meanwhile, Al-Qaida militants in Yemen have claimed responsibility for the terror attacks in France.
Queensland election
 Labor candidate Kate Jones was unseated in Ashgrove in 2012 by Campbell Newman. Photograph: Marty Silk/AAP 
The latest poll shows Queensland premier Campbell Newman would lose his own seat in the election in two weeks, with Labor’s Kate Jones ahead of Newman on 47.6% of the primary vote.

Labor has pledged $100m to improving the Great Barrier Reef.

The LNP and Labor are refusing to do preferences deals with minor parties, but Katter’s Australian party, Palmer United and the Greens won't be silenced.

Nine things you probably didn't know about the Queensland election.

Follow our full Queensland election 2015 coverage here.
Australian news and politics
Manus Island detention centre hunger strike. 
Manus Island detention centre is on the verge of another riot, with more than 500 men now joining a mass hunger strike and at least two men having stitched their lips together, and there is no access to running water after water pumps at the centre broke.
One of the Manus Island hunger strikers has pleaded to see his Australian daughter before he diesand rare footage from inside Manus Island detention centre reveals the desperation of asylum seekers:"We are human beings ... Please help us. Please help. We're begging you, help us."

The federal court is being asked to overturn environment minister Greg Hunt’s approval of Adani’s Carmichael coalmine because he did not take into account some of the impacts on the Great Barrier Reef.

Tony Abbott is facing calls to resign as the minister for women if he does not commit to mandatory gender reporting requirements for big business.
Around the world
 Nigerians cram into a bus to flee a town in north-east Nigeria following Boko Haram attack on Baga. Photograph: Str/EPA 
The Boko Haram massacre in Nigeira has not, so far, warranted comment from president Goodluck Jonathan, but what victims have told the Guardian about the attacks is harrowing: "I walked through five villages and each one was empty except for dead bodies"

The crew on board the International Space Station have been forced to evacuate the US section after an alarm sounded for a potentially hazardous chemical leak.Taliban militants have been arrested over the attack on a Pakistan school that left 130 dead.
Saudi blogger faces next 50 lashes as government ignores global protests.
More from around the web

• Gillian Triggs has told the Sydney Morning Herald she will continue to investigate complaints against the government without fear or favour.
 
One last thing
 A still from the one-minute clip for Swedish children’s programme Bacillakuten. Photograph: YouTube/SVT 
Sweden is gripped by a furious row over a children’s cartoon, with parents angrily complaining about a depiction of dancing penises and vaginas.
Have an excellent day – and if you spot something I've missed, let me know on Twitter @earleyedition.


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