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Australian jobs come first: PM
Prime Minister Julia Gillard no foreign worker will take an Australian job in the mining sector after union leaders lashed out at the federal government's skilled migration plan.
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PNG's Chief Justice charged with sedition
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'Stolen Generation' stories collected
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PNG's Chief Justice charged with sedition
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Police probe Times email hacking
Rupert Murdoch-owned newspaper The Times has now also been dragged into the broadening scandal over press wrongdoing.
Police are investigating alleged email interception by Rupert Murdoch's The Times of London, a British MP says - dragging Britain's oldest national newspaper into the broadening scandal over press wrongdoing.
Labour MP Tom Watson, who helped lift the lid on tabloid phone hacking, released a letter from police confirming they were investigating alleged email hacking by The Times.
Watson, a member of Parliament's Culture, Media and Sport committee, had written to police asking them to take up the issue.
The letter from Detective Superintendent John Levett, head of the force's computer hacking investigation, is dated January 25 and tells Watson that "the concerns raised within your letters are under investigation and officers ... are dealing directly with the victim".
The 226-year-old Times has acknowledged that a former reporter tried to intercept emails in 2009 to unmask an anonymous policeman who blogged as NightJack.
Editor James Harding told Britain's media ethics inquiry last month that the reporter had acted on his own and had been reprimanded. The paper later published the blogger's name, but Harding insisted it had been obtained by legal means.
London's Metropolitan Police confirmed on Thursday that computer hacking investigators "are in contact with Mr Watson in relation to specific issues he wishes to raise", but would not give further details or confirm the letter's authenticity. The Times declined to comment.
In the wake of the new development, Harding will be summoned back to give further testimony to the judge-led ethics inquiry.
Police are holding parallel inquiries into phone hacking, police bribery and claims of computer hacking by Murdoch papers, all of them triggered by the revelation that the now-defunct News of the World tabloid listened to mobile phone voice mails in its quest for stories.
The investigation has expanded to take in claims of illegal payments to police by staff of the News of the World and its sister tabloid, The Sun.
Murdoch's News Corp has already admitted computer hacking, acknowledging that the News of the World hacked the emails of Chris Shipman, the son of serial killer Harold Shipman. It has apologised and paid Shipman damages.
Murdoch shut down the 168-year-old News of the World in July after the revelation it had eavesdropped on the mobile phone voicemail messages of celebrities, athletes, politicians and even an abducted teenager.
The scandal has triggered a continuing public inquiry into media ethics and the relationship between the press, police and politicians.
More than two dozen people have been arrested by police - many of them journalists and executives of Murdoch newspapers.
The scandal has led to the resignations of several senior Murdoch executives and two of the London police force's top officers. An earlier police investigation failed to find evidence that hacking went beyond one News of the World reporter and a private investigator, who were both jailed in 2007 for eavesdropping on the phones of royal staff.
News Corp has since acknowledged it was much more widespread, and allegations have spread to the Sun, Britain's best-selling daily - and now to the venerable Times.
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