>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / ASIA / STORY
Aust officials lose free massages
Wed, Jan 02, 2008
AFP

SYDNEY - AUSTRALIAN public servants are to lose one of their more unusual perks as part of a crackdown on bureaucratic spending - tax payer-funded massages, reports said on Wednesday.

Officials spent more than A$200,000 (S$252,000) on the rub-downs over two years, Sydney's Daily Telegraph said on Wednesday.

Postal workers spent the most on massages (A$55,000) but senior staff at the Australian Bureau of Statistics were also partial to the treatment, spending A$10,120, while Treasury officials outlayed A$17,000.

The department of former prime minister John Howard, meanwhile, racked up some A$6,000 in massages.

Figures tabled in parliament show bureaucrats spent A$108,710 on massages in 2004 and A$89,000 the following year.

A spokesman for Assistant Treasurer Chris Bowen, who has previously labelled the practice a 'blatant waste of expenditure", said the minister was expected to advise agency heads that tax-payer funded massages must stop.

Other ministers are likely to follow Mr Bowen's lead and scrap the rub-downs as part of new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's cuts to government spending, the paper said. -- AFP

Is this article useful to you?
 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Aust officials lose free massages
   
 
  Bird flu forces Bangladesh to cull 20,000 chickens
   
 
  China rings in New Year with Olympic fervour
   
 
  Taiwan leader wants unconditional peace with China
   
 
  Japanese PM renews pledge to resume anti-terror mission
   
 
  Bhutto was to give 'proof' of vote-rigging: party official
   
 
  Indonesian flood toll rises, hits transport
   
 
  M'sian Health Minister admits he is man in video
   
 
  Tamil legislator shot dead in Sri Lanka
   
 
  Hundreds hurt in Philippines New Year revelry
   
>> RELATED STORY
Aust officials lose free massages
Elephant falls from truck, kills circus worker
Australian copper thieves loot cemeteries
Aussie surfer attacked by buttock-biting shark
Australian police smash alleged child porn ring

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Travel: A royal walk in Central Australia

Business: Stepping out of comfort zone to find new footing

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
Search: