Nobel Peace Prize winner 'obvious'
October 6th 2011 04:28
This year's Nobel Peace prize winner is "obvious," the chairman of the prize committee says, and he's surprised that "commentators and experts" haven't picked up on it.
Muammar Muhammad Abu Minyar al-Gaddafi (born 7 June 1942), commonly known as Muammar Gaddafi or Colonel Gaddafi, is the former autocratic ruler of Libya.
The 58-year-old has all but ruled out a return in the future, and said even a less hands-on role at a football club wouldn't appeal to him if it's full-time.
"He's just a ripping bloke, such a nice guy, but just hard and tough and wanted to win - a really ruthless competitor," retired Cat Cameron Ling said.
It is alleged they were key players of a people-smuggling syndicate responsible for planning and facilitating the illegal arrival of several people bound for Australia, the AFP said in a statement.
This is "obvious," the chairman of the Nobel Peace prize committee says, and he's surprised that "commentators and experts" haven't picked up on it.
Dennis Cometti was featured in an episode in the first Australian series of Who Do You Think You Are?, where he traced his father's Italian heritage back to Italy and discovered that an ancestor on his mother's side had been involved in a mass murder.
"I'd love that. I don't know whether it would be on the agenda (but) it would certainly be something I would consider," Malthouse said in Perth on Wednesday as he launched his new book The Ox is Slow but the Earth is Patient.
"His life has been an open book," opposition treasury spokesman Tim Nicholls told ABC Radio on Thursday.
Muammar Muhammad Abu Minyar al-Gaddafi (born 7 June 1942), commonly known as Muammar Gaddafi or Colonel Gaddafi, is the former autocratic ruler of Libya.
The 58-year-old has all but ruled out a return in the future, and said even a less hands-on role at a football club wouldn't appeal to him if it's full-time.
"He's just a ripping bloke, such a nice guy, but just hard and tough and wanted to win - a really ruthless competitor," retired Cat Cameron Ling said.
It is alleged they were key players of a people-smuggling syndicate responsible for planning and facilitating the illegal arrival of several people bound for Australia, the AFP said in a statement.
This is "obvious," the chairman of the Nobel Peace prize committee says, and he's surprised that "commentators and experts" haven't picked up on it.
Dennis Cometti was featured in an episode in the first Australian series of Who Do You Think You Are?, where he traced his father's Italian heritage back to Italy and discovered that an ancestor on his mother's side had been involved in a mass murder.
"I'd love that. I don't know whether it would be on the agenda (but) it would certainly be something I would consider," Malthouse said in Perth on Wednesday as he launched his new book The Ox is Slow but the Earth is Patient.
"His life has been an open book," opposition treasury spokesman Tim Nicholls told ABC Radio on Thursday.
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