Tonight's industrial trouble that's costing millions, Western fears about Iraq's military might and slaving over a hot stove to stardom. Good evening, thanks for joining us. Being late edition tonight, the meat industry ral that's costing us a million dollars a day in lost exports. Rural affairs reporter Ian Baker says the dispute over award restructuring is seriously damaging overseas markets. For nearly a year, major Victorian abattoirs have been bedeviled by industrial trouble in the run up to a new award. In this now idle plant and its twin across the way in Brooklyn, a total of 65 days and about $100 million in export earnings have been lost. Now the workers have walked off again, maybe for a fortnight. Japanese are now seeing Victorian suppliers as being very unreliable and I think that's one of the biggest hurts that's happening with the whole thing. What's behind the trouble is employer attempts to shift from payment by the number of animals processed to payment according to tasks. It's an unpleasant, dangerous job and the workers are used to good money and getting their way. The issue has been languishing in the industrial relations commission for seven months. It has, because of the delay, has caused frustration on both sides. Meanwhile, $1 million a day is not being earned in exports. The prime stock are waiting processing, are having to be fed and found pasture or moved to other abattoirs that at least for the moment are still working. We don't know what the union will do next week in other plants but we would assume that they will be attacked as we have been. The issue will go before the full bench of the industrial relations commission next Friday. On the election front, Janine Haynes says her aim is to break the two party system and she believes that will be achieved by the turn of the century. At the National Press Club today, she outlined the Democrats hit list including privatisation, further deregulation and what Janine Haynes believes is inevitable, a continuing crackdown on the welfare sector. Her problem is that for these issues, the balance of power has no power with both major parties supporting such changes. Her real goal is long term. My aim is to win Kingston this election and in 1993 to build on that so that by the end of this decade we are a sizeable and influential and important and much more importantly long term thinking opposition party with an aim to break the two party system next century. Ms Haynes hopes that sort of response will be reflected here at the National Tally Room in Canberra in eight days time. The polls give the Democrats 14% support. Their preferences will be enough to determine the outcome. Laurie Connell and two other former directors of the failed Rothwells Merchant Bank have been released on bail to reappear in court on Monday on conspiracy charges. Today was the second time Laurie Connell has been charged in connection with the affairs of Rothwells which collapsed in November 1988 owing hundreds of millions of dollars. Last year, Connell was charged with four counts of making false written statements in annual reports published by Rothwells. Today former Rothwells director Peter Lucas and former company secretary Thomas Hugel were also charged with four counts each of making false written statements. The further charge of conspiracy to defraud was laid against all three men today and relates to offences allegedly committed between 1983 and 1988. Corporate affairs investigators laid the charges under the criminal code. Laurie Connell who is due to appear in court next month on last year's charges today addressed the media after being bailed from the lock up. This charge along with the others will be bitterly fought to the finish. I'm innocent of any charge and undoubtedly I'll have that opportunity to establish that in court. My legal team is confident that we'll win on every count. Connell was released on bail of $200,000 while Hugel and Lucas were released on bail of $1 million. To finance now and higher commodity prices helped boost Australian share markets today with strong trading in the resources sector. Western mining and BHP both performed well and the banks continued to regain some of last week's losses. The all-ordinaries rose 12 points and the dollar hold firm. Overseas now under Muslim extremist groups threatened to kill free American hostages and attack airports and planes if the migration of Soviet Jews to Israel isn't halted. The Islamic Jihad also wants Palestinians to be released from Israeli jails. Iraq is organising anti-British demonstrations this weekend following condemnation of the hanging of journalist Fazad Bezoft. The British government attacked Iraq for the execution of Bezoft, an Iranian-born freelance journalist who was on assignment for the Observer newspaper. Iraq said Bezoft had confessed to spying for the Israelis. He was arrested last September while checking reports of an explosion at a military complex. And American defence analysts are becoming alarmed at Iraq's growing military capability. Much of the technology for that development is coming from the West. This is the rocket that took the world by surprise. When it hurtled into the sky last December, American intelligence experts were forced to revise their conclusions about Iraq's military capability. The government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein can now manufacture its own medium-range ballistic missiles capable of reaching Iran, the Soviet Union and Israel. That gives Iraq a long-range delivery system for the chemical weapons that it has already developed and used during its war with Iran. These photographs and construction plans obtained by ABC News show three sites for missile development, production and testing near the Iraqi capital Baghdad. Nearly all the technical equipment and support for the missile programme come from companies in the West. This, despite an agreement signed by the US and its allies to stop exports that could enable other countries to obtain ballistic missiles. An Austrian engineer who worked in Iraq and whose identity is concealed because he fears Iraqi retaliation says engineers from companies like Siemens in West Germany knew they were helping Iraq to develop its missile programme. US officials confirm that Iraq is building a plant to produce the uranium needed for nuclear bombs. Experts say that Iraq will not have a nuclear warhead for five to ten years, but as the surprise rocket launch demonstrated, the experts can be wrong. Libya's Colonel Gaddafi is now blaming West Germany for the fire at a pharmaceutical plant that the Americans believe produces chemical weapons. Earlier he claimed the CIA and the Israelis were responsible for the blaze. Hundreds of branches of the Bank of Ireland in the Republic, Kholsteryn, mainland Britain have been placed on alert following a $4 million extortion threat reportedly from the IRA. News of the security alert broke late this afternoon when the Bank of Ireland's Dublin headquarters issued a statement that unspecified threats had been made in a telephone call to one of the bank's Ulster branches. A report to be published in tomorrow's Irish Times claims that staff at over 300 banks in the Republic, Ulster and mainland Britain have been warned to be on their guard in the coming weeks. They have alerted their staff that they need to exercise extra vigilance in the weeks ahead and my security sources here tell me that it's the next two weeks that could prove to be the most dangerous period. Security forces north and south of the border are now investigating but they're not revealing whether the threats made were against bank staff or of direct attacks on bank premises. The Bank of Ireland stressed again tonight that although they were taking the demand seriously there was no question of the bank paying up. Brazil's youngest president, Claude Mello, has vowed to eradicate that country's galloping inflation. Claude was inaugurated in Brasilia before a host of American luminaries including Cuba's Fidel Castro. Fidel Castro is now very much the odd man out and that was a point the Americans were quick to seize on today. Vice President Dan Quayle said the rest of the Latin American leaders in Brasilia were there because people had voted for them. Castro must in fact change and sooner or later change will come to Cuba. I am convinced of it. Defending his position, Castro said communist Cuba had the right to choose its own political style. Castro and Quayle did not meet face to face at the swearing in of Brazil's new leader, Fernando Calour de Mayo. The 40 year old Calour is the first president elected by popular vote here since 1960 after years of mainly military rule. There's a new star in the culinary sky. Michelin has given its highest rating, that's three stars, to a Monte Carlo restaurant that's been open for only three years and is run by a chef who's just 33 years old. Bon vivant, Pierre Salinger didn't need much persuasion to do this assignment. Like all the great chefs of France, Alain Ducasse goes to the local food markets early every morning to check the quality of the products. Those that pass his inspection go to his restaurant, the Louis 15th, in Monte Carlo's elegant Hotel de Paris. What makes Alain Ducasse so special is that at 33 he is overtaking the giants of French cuisine nearly twice his age, like Paul Bocuse, Pierre Trois-Groves, and Paul Aberlain. And he's doing it by launching a bold new way of cooking. There are two distinctive aspects to Ducasse's techniques. He is opposed to the thick sauces that have dominated French cooking for years. My big point is no cream, he told me. I want to produce more refined, tastier dishes without heavy sauce. And he believes that he should concentrate on the products of his region, the French Mediterranean coast in northern Italy. And what chef could go wrong with this extraordinary wine cellar underneath his kitchen? It contains 250,000 bottles of wine and champagne, worth $10 million, largely owned by Prince Renier of Monaco. The Michelin three-star is awarded for superb cooking, fine wines, faultless service, and elegant surroundings. Now the national weather. A few showers for Brisbane, showers developing in Hobart, a late storm for Darwin, and mainly fine in Sydney and the other capital cities. And the American capital is experiencing an early spring. We're going to leave you with Washington's cherry blossoms, so do have a good weekend. That's a safe one. Until Monday night. Good night. I can feel it coming in the air tonight. Oh, Lord. Oh, Lord.