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Sacked Australian cricket coach Mickey Arthur speaks to journalists in Bristol, 
England, on June 24, 2013. Arthur has said there had been a 
"deliberate campaign" against him in past days and his reputation had suffered 
greatly from his sacking.AFP/FileSYDNEY, New South Wales (AFP)  Axed Australian 
cricket coach Mickey Arthur on Sunday said there had been a "deliberate 
campaign" against him in past days and his reputation had suffered greatly 
from his sacking.Returning to Perth after attending his mother's funeral 
in South Africa, Arthur said he had no choice but to take 
legal action against Cricket Australia after he was dismissed just days 
before the start of the Ashes series against England."After my dismissal, 
I received nothing in writing from Cricket Australia, no contact, and no 
payment at all, not even my basic leave pay, until I was 
forced to bring in lawyers to assist in the process," he said."I 
had tried on a number of occasions to make direct contact at 
a very senior level of Cricket Australia, for days there was just 
no response."Arthur, who was replaced by Darren Lehmann, said that given 
the circumstances of his dismissal, he had hoped that Cricket Australia 
would be willing to resolve the matter through private talks.But explosive 
details of his Aus$4 million case to the Fair Work Commission, including 
claims of divisions within the Australian team, were leaked to the media 
ahead of the second Test."Selective leaks by othe
 Beltrame, the top security official for Rio de Janeiro state 
overseeing the police who will counter any violent protests, said he's certain 
his officers "are ready to host the pope" because they know his 
set agenda and have a plan in place.However, Beltrame acknowledged that 
the protests are an unknown factor and that each demonstration would need 
to be approached differently depending upon how it unfolds."The challenges 
of the protests are different. The police have to be flexible and 
adapt, because there is no coordinated agenda (of protests)," he said. "We're 
vigilant, but it depends upon how they happen, when they happen, which 
is information that we don't fully have."Joe Biundini, a Brazilian-born 
former U.S. Marine who heads the FAM International Group security firm, 
warned that much will depend on police response to any protests."If you 
see the police doing something stupid, like violently attacking protesters, 
that could cause some very serious problems," Biundini said.Security officials 
have said the stiffest security challenge will be providing security for 
the pope's two mass events on 2.5 mile-long (4 kilometer-long) Copacabana 
beach. Still, they insist they're experienced in handling mega-crowds and 
point to a string of concerts that have attracted similarly massive numbers 
of spectators to Copacabana.April's bombing attacks on the Boston Marathon, 
which killed three and injured 264, have certainly raised sensitivities 
abo
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