Brazilian Referee Pulls Out Gun Instead Of Red Card During Intense Soccer Match

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Gabriel Murta is facing disciplinary action after going to the changing rooms to get the weapon and racing back onto the pitch waving it around.

A football player in Argentina shot dead a referee after he was shown a red card during an amateur match in the Cordoba province. Local media reports said that after being sent off, the player returned to the pitch with a gun and shot the 48-year-old referee in his head, chest and neck. Police are searching for the accused, who is still at large. Another player was also injured, but was in a stable condition.Instruction in Australia is fundamentally the obligation of the states and domains. Every state or domain government gives financing and controls the general population and tuition based schools inside of its administering territory. The government finances the state funded colleges, however was not included in setting college curriculum.[8] As of 2012, the Australian National Curriculum,[9] being worked on and trial for quite a while, has as of now been embraced by a few schools and will get to be obligatory soon. For the most part, instruction in Australia takes after the three-level model which incorporates essential instruction (elementary schools), trailed by optional instruction (auxiliary schools/secondary schools) and tertiary instruction (Universities, TAFE universities and Vocation Education and Training suppliers/VET suppliers).

The Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2006 assessment positioned the Australian training framework as 6th for perusing, eighth for science and thirteenth for arithmetic, on an overall scale including 56 countries.[10] The PISA 2009 assessment positioned the Australian instruction framework as 6th for perusing, seventh for science and ninth for science, a change with respect to the 2006 rankings.[11]
In 2012, training firm Pearson positioned Australian instruction as thirteenth on the planet [12]
The Education Index, distributed with the UN's Human Development Index in 2008, taking into account information from 2006, records Australia as 0.993, amongst the most noteworthy on the planet, tied for first with Denmark and Finland.[13]

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