1. Bali teenager in court, prosecutors want 3 month jail term
Lawyers pressing the case of the Australian teenager charged with marijuana possession in Indonesia have requested he be given a three month sentence. It is up to the judge whether he accepts the sentence or not. It remains unclear where the teen might spend that sentence if it is handed down.
2. Government plain smoke pack laws pass Senate
‘Big Tobacco’ has promised to take the Federal Government to the High Court after its world-first plain cigarette packing laws passed the Senate yesterday. The laws will start six months later than originally planned in December 2012. British American Tobacco Australia said it would start legal proceedings once plain packaging becomes law, arguing it is unconstitutional to remove its trademarks and other intellectual property without compensation. The laws require all smoke packets, no matter the brand, to be sold in the same olive green packet with large health warnings and graphic images.
3. Call for further investigation into fraudulent vaccine report
The British Medical Journal, which first exposed the fraud of Dr Andrew Wakefield and his now proven bogus 1998 study linking the Measles Mumps Rubella (MMR) vaccine to the onset of autism, has called on British parliament to launch an inquiry into that reports 12 co-authors if the University College London (UCL) does not begin its own independent probe. Dr Andrew Wakefield and another co-author John Walker-Smith were struck off the medical registry for their efforts but the editor of the British Medical Journal says the other researchers need to be looked at too. In a letter to Andrew Miller, who chairs the Commons Science and Technology Committee, BMJ editor Fiona Godlee says if UCL does not immediately launch an independent probe, MPs must step in. “This is not a call to debate whether MMR causes autism – science has asked that question and answered it,” she writes. “We need to know what happened in this inglorious chapter in medicine. Institutional misconduct is too important to be left to the institutions themselves,” she said. Here’s the myth busting cheat sheet we ran on vaccines if you missed it.
Top Comments
Just wanted to share another lovely pic/story:
Mosha the elephant has been fitted with an prosthetic leg in Lampang, Thailand, after losing a limb when she stepped on a landmine.
The full story is here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/...
1. Bali teenager in court, prosecutors want 3 month jail term..
If that included time already served, I actually think that might be a good result.