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Boy’s monster tantrum destroys toy store

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 31 Desember 2014 | 23.27

Mayhem in Dollar General as 10-year-old boy goes on a rampage, destroying the aisles and attacking customers before being dragged out by his collar. Courtesy YouTube/SuperkenGaming.

IT was the meltdown to end all meltdowns.

A 10 year-old boy had an epic tantrum and went on a rampage through a Florida store, knocking items from shelves in almost every aisle.

The boy left a trail of destruction in Dollar General and it only ended when a store employee grabbed him and dragged him out of the store.

But that was only after the boy threatened to hit a customer screaming, "I'm not afraid to do it."

Many of the customers just stood in shock and watched the boy's stunning behaviour, but one onlooker was so appalled they called police.

On the video a man can be heard calling the boy "jit" which is apparently prison slang for someone younger than you.

The boy was alone in the store but it wasn't known when it was filmed, although it was posted online on December 9.


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Play-D’oh: Penis-shaped toy ‘ruins Xmas’

Awks ... parents are outraged at a Play-Doh tool that looks like a penis. Picture: Twitter/El Clarko via Facebook Source: Supplied

OOPS! Did Play-Doh just ruin Christmas?

Hasbro is in major damage control after releasing a toy part that looks like a penis.

Parents who bought the Sweet Shoppe Cake Mountain playset in November reportedly complained online that the plastic icing topper (or extruder) didn't look child-friendly.

Rather than respond to the concerns on social media, Hasbro sent parents less phallic-looking replacement parts.

The toy manufacturer's low-key response ensured the gaffe stayed out of the media, Uproxx reported.

But in a bungled attempt at removing traces of the offending accessory from its Facebook page over Christmas, Hasbro attracted lots of unwanted publicity.

The reaction has varied, but one parent suggested Hasbro had "ruined Christmas."

The playset, which retails in Australia for about $40, comes with a bottom cake tier, cake machine with cake stand and a textured roller, among other items.

Recommended for children three and over, the 2-in-1 playset lets kids "make amazing pretend layer cakes with the cake press."

The toy ... Play-Doh's Sweet Shoppe Cake Mountain playset. Picture: Hasbro Source: Supplied

A compilation of the times this particular body part has made an unexpected appearance.


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Missed it? Watch Syd fireworks

Revellers around the world wait in anticipation to start the countdown to the new year.

Mambo creator Reg Mombassa explains his inspiration for creating an iconic design for Sydney's 2013 New Year's Eve fireworks. Courtesy City of Sydney.

WATCH the spectacular fireworks display that brought in the new year in Sydney

A GIGANTIC beating blue heart encased in a lightbulb throbbed on Sydney's Harbour Bridge as the city welcomed in the new year.

The blue and red symbol was unveiled as the centrepiece of the world-famous New Year's Eve fireworks spectacular as the city erupted in celebrations in its final goodbye to the year that was. Revellers hugged, kissed, clapped and cheered as Sydney showed off what it does best.

SHOW THE WORLD HOW AUSTRALIA PARTIES ON NYE. THE GOOD, THE BAD...AND THE UGLY SIDE: EMAIL NEWS@NEWS.COM.AU

New Years Eve fireworks from Mrs Macquarie's Chair, Sydney. Picture: Britta Campion Source: News Corp Australia

New Year's fireworks erupt over Sydney's iconic Harbour Bridge and Opera House. Picture: Saeed Khan Source: AFP

The traditional fireworks exploded into a spectacular light show. Picture: Saeed Khan Source: AFP

Bursts of red, white and yellow set the Harbour Bridge and Opera House on fire before dandelions of blue, green and pink exploded over the city.

For more than 10 minutes the crowed stopped and marvelled as the harbour was enveloped in a cornucopia of colour, with the bridge once again stealing the limelight.

A bright golden waterfall cascaded downwards as yellow, pink and white fireworks shot from its arc, as the show reached its crescendo.

Picture: Cameron Spencer Source: Getty Images

Fireworks explode off the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Picture: Cameron Spencer Source: Getty Images

No biggie. Just a few laser light shows. Picture: Saeed KHAN Source: AFP

An amazing sight as Sydney celebrates the New Year. Picture: Saeed Khan Source: AFP

More than 7.5 tonnes were fired, including the new "ghost shell" crackers making their Australian debut.

Fireworks explode off the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Picture: Cameron Spencer Source: Getty Images

Picture: Cameron Spencer Source: Getty Images

Picture: Cameron Spencer Source: Getty Images

Picture: Cameron Spencer Source: Getty Images

Picture: Saeed Khan Source: AFP

The midnight fireworks display to herald in the new year, seen from Potts Point in Sydney. Picture: Toby Zerna Source: News Corp Australia


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Kaley Cuoco: Why I’m not a feminist

Not a feminist ... Kaley Cuoco says she likes to serve her husband. Picture: Instagram Source: Instagram

SHE may bring home the bacon earning $1 million an episode for The Big Bang Theory but Kaley Cuoco says when she gets home she likes to cook it too.

Cuoco, who married tennis player Ryan Sweeting on New Year's Eve 2013, says she likes playing the housewife to her husband.

Asked by Redbook whether she considered herself a feminist, Cuoco replied "Is it bad if I say no?"

"Things are different now, and I know a lot of the work that paved the way for women happened before I was around ... I was never that feminist girl demanding equality, but maybe that's because I've never really faced inequality," she said.

Loved up ... The Big Bang Theory's leading lady Kaley Cuoco and Ryan Sweeting. Picture: Kaley Cuoco/ Instagram Source: Supplied

"I cook for Ryan five nights a week: It makes me feel like a housewife. I love that. I know it sounds old-fashioned, but I like the idea of women taking care of their men. I'm so in control of my work that I like coming home and serving him. My mom was like that, so I think it kind of rubbed off."

Earlier this year former Full House star Candace Cameron Bure released a book entitled, Balancing It All, in which she says that she is a proud "submissive wife".

"I am not a passive person, but I chose to fall into a more submissive role in our relationship because I wanted to do everything in my power to make my marriage and family work," the former Full House star wrote.

Submissive ... former Full House star Candace Cameron Bure. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

Child star ... Candace Cameron with Ashley Olsen and Jodie Sweetin from Full House. Picture: Supplied. Source: News Corp Australia

Cuoco also opened up to Redbook about getting a boob job.

"I had no boobs!" she said. "And it really was the best thing ever! I always felt ill-proportioned. My implants made me feel more confident in my body. It wasn't about trying to be a porn star or wanting to look hot and sexy."

Cuoco recently had to deny reports that she had undergone a nose job after posting photos after a sinus operation.

"For those haters out there who are gonna hate hate hate no matter what, let me inform you that I have not been able to breathe through my nose like a normal human being in years," she captioned a photo of herself on Instagram. "This surgery is changing my life. With that being said, if I DID get a nose job (which I didn't), I would be shouting that from the rooftops as well."

Big bucks ... Actors (L-R) Simon Helberg, Johnny Galecki, Kaley Cuoco, Jim Parsons and Kunal Nayyar in a scene from The Big Bang Theroy. Picture: Channel Nine. Source: Supplied


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‘There’s no winning, no way out’

No hope ... Leelah Alcorn said she would never be happy. Picture: Facebook Source: Supplied

A TRANSGENDER teenager who killed herself after her Christian parents refused to accept her has left a heartbreaking suicide note.

Leelah Alcorn, 16, stepped in front of a tractor trailer on a rural highway a few kilometres from her family home in Kings Mill, Ohio.

Her mother posted a tribute to her child on Facebook using her birth name Joshua and not mentioning the suicide.

However, the teen had published a note hours before her death on her Tumblr account explaining in detail why she had chosen to end her life.

Felt different ... Leelah Alcorn was born Joshua but says she identified as a girl from the age of four. Picture: Tumblr Source: Supplied

She says that she identified as a girl from the age of four and that when she discovered that she could be transgender at aged 14 she "cried of happiness".

"After 10 years of confusion I finally understood who I was," she wrote.

Heartbreakingly, her devout Christian mother, Carla Wood Alcorn, refused to accept her desire to identify as a girl.

She wrote: "I immediately told my mom, and she reacted extremely negatively, telling me that it was a phase, that I would never truly be a girl, that God doesn't make mistakes, that I am wrong."

'Gay conversion therapy killed my son'

Christians ... Carla Wood Alcorn with a man believed to be her husband. Picture: Facebook Source: Supplied

Leelah went on: "If you are reading this, parents, please don't tell this to your kids. Even if you are Christian or are against transgender people don't ever say that to someone, especially your kid. That won't do anything but make them hate them self. That's exactly what it did to me."

She was forced by her parents to see a Christian therapist who told her she was selfish and wrong and should seek God's help. When she didn't receive her parents' consent to transition at aged 16 she cried herself to sleep.

She said she turned against her parents, coming out as gay at school but despite positive responses from her friends she continued to be viewed by her mum and dad as "an embarrassment" because she was not "their perfect little straight christian boy (sic)".

Tribute ... Carla Wood Alcorn's tribute mentioned neither the suicide or the sexual orientation of her child. Picture: Facebook Source: Supplied

Writing about her reasons for suicide she said: "I'm never going to find a man who loves me. I'm never going to be happy. Either I live the rest of my life as a lonely man who wishes he were a woman or I live my life as a lonelier woman who hates herself. There's no winning. There's no way out."

She ended the note: "My death needs to mean something. My death needs to be counted in the number of transgender people who commit suicide this year. I want someone to look at that number and say "that's f***ed up" and fix it. Fix society. Please."

In a short Facebook tribute Carla Wood Alcorn ignored her child's female persona, calling her Joshua and saying she had gone "home to heaven" after she was hit by a truck during "an early morning walk".

If you or someone you know is in need of crisis or suicide prevention support, please call Lifeline on 13 11 14 or visit www.lifeline.org.au/gethelp


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This will make your tummy churn

The appropriately-named Joe Gross filmed himself removing what might be the longest ever ingrown hair from what doctors thought was just a troublesome pimple. Courtesy YouTube/Joe Gross.

Ouch, this stomach churning video is not for the faint-hearted. Picture: Screengrab/Joe Gross Source: YouTube

JUST when you think you've seen it all along comes another video which tops the definition of gross.

Warning: This is not for the faint-hearted.

A video, posted by a man aptly named Joe Gross, shows the removal of what is possibly the world's longest ingrown hair.

The video begins with 'Gross' claiming this is the grossest thing he's ever done.

"I've had this giant black mark on my face for months and it literally looks like a pound of hair," he said.

The size of the gigantic hair is more than a bit obvious. Picture: Screengrab/Joe Gross Source: YouTube

He then starts pulling the massive hair from his cheek with a pair of tweezers.

In the video, which was originally posted online two years ago but has gone viral after it appeared on Reddit, Gross reveals he had this pimple which would ooze every couple of months for about a year.

He said a dermatologist him it was a cyst that would need to cut out, but "apparently it was just the longest ingrown hair in history."

Still it looks a lot more simpler and less painful than the woman who had a blackhead removed after 25 years.

And it definitely pales in comparison to a pimple American man Ryan Schmidt had for "around 30 years".

A video of his giant leg zit bursting over his disgusted wife shows clocked up hundreds of thousands of hits.

Ah, that's better: The hair is almost out. Picture: Screengrab/Joe Gross Source: YouTube


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NYE: The cute, the bad and ugly

This is how Aussies celebrate NYE

Supplied Editorial reader pic new years eve 010115

AN AUSSIE NYE starts with love and merriment, but as most of us predict, it goes downhill fairly quickly.

Play-D'oh: Penis-shaped toy 'ruins Xmas'

Supplied Editorial PLAY DOH

WELL that's awkward. Hasbro is in major damage control after releasing a toy accessory that doesn't look, er, child-friendly.

Killer hubby: Why I took wife's life

Supplied Editorial mark lavoie

IGNORING the pleas of loved ones, a man shot dead his wife before turning the gun on himself. He explained on Facebook why he did it.

Life hacks: How to win parenting

Life hacks: How to win parenting

WHEN you have a baby, everything changes: your days, your nights, your routines. This mum's approach to her new life is not only refreshing — it's absolutely hilarious.

Could this shut down porn industry?

Thinkstock image a young gay couple standing in a doorway holding hands

CALIFORNIA has issued a HIV alert after a gay porn actor tested positive after a shoot. But what does this mean for the adult film industry?

This plastic surgery selfie takes the cake

This plastic surgery selfie takes the cake

WE GET it people like taking photos of food and themselves, we don't judge. But when you take a photo of say yourself and food WHILE in surgery then we have questions.

Mum gives birth to 'miracle' quads

Supplied Editorial 30122014babies

A SET of quadruplets, whose conception was said to be one in 70 million, has been delivered in the US.

Mum throws kids from raging inferno

Supplied Editorial FIRE

"YOUR mamma said do it. C'mon!" A terrified mother was filmed flinging her children from a burning apartment into the arms of neighbours in a harrowing Christmas Day fire.


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Man didn’t know mum, sister were hostages

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 17 Desember 2014 | 23.26

Lindt cafe victim Tori Johnson was shot dead in the final act of the Sydney siege, killed by Man Haron Monis as other hostages fled. Courtesy: Nine News

People are laying flowers at a makeshift shrine in Sydney, honouring the victims of the Martin Place siege.

WHEN Robert Honan went to bed Monday, he had no idea his mother and sister were hostages in the Lindt cafe siege unfolding on TV.

But at 2.30am, the Sunshine Coast father was woken by a shocking phone call that his elderly mother, Robin Hope, had been "shot".

Not only that, but his distressed mum did not know where his sister Louisa Hope was after they became separated in the chaos.

Robin, 74, and Louisa, 52, were among the last to be rescued after police stormed the Sydney cafe in a hail of gunfire.

MEMORIAL: Cafe hero's family overwhelmed at tribute

HOSTAGES: If we didn't run, we were going to die

PROBE: Police dispute Abbott's gun claims

Both were unable to run and received shrapnel wounds believed to be from stun guns.

Robin was filmed on television being carried out on a stretcher after she was injured on the shoulder.

Robert Honan and partner Danielle Svensen at their Mt Coolum home. Source: News Limited

They have since undergone surgery to remove shrapnel pieces and Mr Honan said his sister was expected to remain in hospital for a month.

Mr Honan chose not to release his mum and sister's names to the public to protect their identities.

Police announce investigation after three people died as police officers stormed a Sydney cafe to free hostages held by a gunman. Natalie Thomas reports.

However their details were circulating on online reports yesterday.

Mr Honan said when the siege ended there was a period of about one hour when he was unsure if his older sister was still alive.

"We knew she was one of the last ones out and that three people had been killed so the chances of her being one of them was pretty high," said Mr Honan.

"Mum was frantic not knowing what had happened in all the chaos. She was rushed to hospital in the ambulance and had no idea where her daughter was and vice versa."

In the fearful dark of Tuesday morning Mr Honan and partner Danielle Svensen lit a candle in their Mt Coolum kitchen.

"We were helpless, and that feeling of being helpless is what the other families would have felt for the whole 16 hours," said Ms Svensen.

Robin and Louisa, who reside in Sydney, had been visiting the city Monday for a business appointment.

Sydneysiders place flowers at a makeshift memorial near Martin Place honouring hostages killed in siege.

Mr Honan said he usually spoke to them about three times a day and had found it unusual that he was unable to get hold of them.

But he did not expect they had visited the cafe and as he watched the dramatic siege unfold on television did not even consider his loved ones had been captured.

"We went to bed thinking 'Those poor people,' and were completely oblivious to the fact that our family was in there as well," said Ms Svensen.

"They had something on that they had to go to so we would have thought that's where they were and not in the cafe.

"But they went there (to the cafe) first and never got to here they were meant to be going."

Mr Honan flew to Sydney on Tuesday to visit his loved ones who are in separate hospitals as they undergo treatment.

He said his mother and sister did not want to talk publicly about the experience.

"They were terrified and upset and had mixed feelings of they're alive," he said.

"They were there from the beginning right to the end. I think it was quite a surreal experience."

Mr Honan said they felt for the families of Tori Johnson and Katrina Dawson who lost their lives.

Originally published as Man didn't know mum, sister were hostages
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‘I was mistaken for the valet’

The help ... US President Barack Obama recalls being mistaken for a valet. Picture: AP Source: AP

HE MAY be the United States president now, but Barack Obama says he's a black man who has been mistaken for the valet.

"There's no black male my age, who's a professional, who hasn't come out of a restaurant and is waiting for their car and somebody didn't hand them their car keys," Mr Obama told People magazine in an interview.

That happened to him, he said.

First lady Michelle Obama said her husband also once was mistaken for a waiter at a black-tie party and asked for coffee. She said even when she went to Target as first lady, a fellow shopper asked her to get something from a shelf.

"I think people forget that we've lived in the White House for six years," she said. "Before that, Barack Obama was a black man that lived on the South Side of Chicago, who had his share of troubles catching cabs."

The first couple spoke about their experiences with racism amid protests nationwide over the deaths at the hands of police of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in Staten Island, New York.

The president said racial relations had improved, but more progress was needed.

"The small irritations or indignities that we experience are nothing compared to what a previous generation experienced," Mr Obama said.

"It's one thing for me to be mistaken for a waiter at a gala. It's another thing for my son to be mistaken for a robber and to be handcuffed, or worse, if he happens to be walking down the street and is dressed the way teenagers dress."


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‘I did something terribly wrong’

Confessed ... Stephen Collins has admitted to abusing three underage women, and says he's been in therapy for 20 years to deal with his inappropriate impulses. Picture: Getty Source: AP

7th Heaven actor Stephen Collins has admitted to sexually abusing three female minors, calling his behaviour "inexcusable".

In a 1000-word essay in People magazine, Collins says "I did something terribly wrong", but says he has not abused anyone in decades and never acted inappropriately on the set of 7th Heaven.

The actor, who played a wholesome pastor dad on the family-friendly TV show, was caught apparently confessing to the sexual abuse of minors in leaked recordings from his divorce proceedings.

"Forty years ago, I did something terribly wrong that I deeply regret," writes Collins, adding that he has been in therapy for 20 years.

Collins admits he twice exposed himself to a pre-teen girl in 1973, when he was 25, and then abused her later at home.

"When the girl and I were watching TV alone, I moved her hand in such a way that caused her to touch me inappropriately," writes Collins.

"It was a completely impulsive act and it's haunted me ever since to think of what I put her through."

Wholesome ... Collins with the cast of "7th Heaven". Picture: Supplied Source: News Limited

He also admits that he exposed himself to two teenage girls in 1982 and in 1994.

"I have been working to atone for it ever since. I've decided to address these issues publicly because two months ago, various news organisations published a recording made by my then-wife, Faye Grant, during a confidential marriage therapy session in January, 2012. This session was recorded without the therapists or my knowledge or consent," he wrote, referring to recordings that first surfaced on TMZ.

"I appeared for eleven seasons on a television series with a cast that included minor females in our TV family, and countless other young actresses throughout the show's eleven years," he wrote.

"I never behaved in appropriately on or off that set — or on any set I've ever worked on."

Collins has personally apologised to one of the victims 15 years after the abuse, who he says was "extraordinarily gracious".

However, he had not apologised to the two other victims after his therapist told him may just add to their trauma.

"I learned in the course of my treatment that my being direct about such matters could actually make things worse for them by opening old wounds. I have not approached the other two women, one of whom is now in her 50s and the other in her 30s."

The actor, who has been dropped from a number of acting gigs after the shocking revelations surfaced, said he is speaking out in order to end speculation about what actually happened.

"On the recording, I described events that took place 20, 32 and 40 years ago. The publication of the recording has resulted in assumptions and innuendos about what I did that go far beyond what actually occurred. As difficult as this is, I want people to know the truth."


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‘I just wanted to get off the plane’

Flight delays ... a China Eastern passenger opened an emergency exit, triggering the inflatable slide. Picture: YouTube/China View Source: Supplied

AN IMPATIENT passenger eager to get off the taxiing plane before other travellers opened the door himself — triggering the emergency slide.

The China Eastern Airlines plane was taxiing at Sanya Fenghaung International Airport in Hainan, China, when the man opened the door, The Straits Times reports.

The flight attendant tried to stop him, but it was too late — the emergency slide was activated.

RELATED: Flight attendant scalded with hot noodles by Air Asia passenger

RELATED: Korean Air 'nut rage' lady breaks silence

Bizarre ... the plane had almost finished taxiing when the man opened one of the doors, automatically deploying the emergency slide. Picture: YouTube/China View Source: Supplied

According to Chinese media, the unidentified passenger told officials he was "eager to get out of the plane once it landed" earlier this month.

He said he didn't pay attention to the emergency landing instructions and didn't think about the consequences of opening the door.

His hasty actions delayed the aircraft's return flight by two hours and cost the airline about 100,000 yuan ($19,710).

The return flight was delayed for almost two hours as the emergency slide had to be put away. Picture: YouTube/China View Source: Supplied

Patrick Smith, author of Cockpit Confidential, explained to the UK Telegraph what happens when an emergency slide is activated.

"While the plane is taxiing, you will get the door to open. You will also be able to activate the door's emergency escape slide," he said.

"As an aircraft approaches the gate, you will sometimes hear the cabin crew calling out 'doors to manual'. This has to do with overriding the automatic deployment function of the slides. Those slides can unfurl with enough force to kill a person, and you don't want them billowing onto the jet bridge or into a catering truck."


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An open letter to Sydney

Two devastated families are struggling with the impact of the deadly Sydney siege that will be felt forever.

Flags at half mast. Picture: Peter Parks Source: AFP

AS I watch from the other side of the world, my lips start to tremble, my eyes start to water.

I want to sob for Sydney.

The horrific events that occurred in the city I've called home for 28 years is beginning to sink in. How could this happen?

ARE YOU OUTSIDE NSW? SEND YOUR CONDOLENCES BELOW

It was only two weeks ago that I left Sydney for a new adventure, a bright future, ready to tackle a brave, new world.

But it's the world I left that is likely to become the brave new world; a city deeply affected by one man wielding a shotgun and a vengeance, armed with hatred and an agenda that up until now, we had only seen through the screen.

There are no online condolence books I can sign, so this is my chance to tell you, Sydney, that I'm mourning for you. That I'm hoping for you. That I love you.

A mourner breaks down in tears and is comforted by her partner at Martin Place in Sydney following the deadly siege that took place at the Lindt Cafe. Picture: Richard Dobson Source: News Corp Australia

There are countless Aussies overseas who wish we could pay our respects at Martin Place. Picture: Richard Dobson Source: News Corp Australia

My thoughts exactly. Picture: Richard Dobson Source: News Corp Australia

A visitor mourns at the makeshift memorial. Picture: Peter Parks Source: AFP

And it's not just me.

As Sydney slept, New York was wide awake, watching the dramatic shootout unfold live on television.

When the barrage of bullets began, our entire office stood up in solidarity. Spanish, Japanese, Australian, American. We couldn't believe what we were seeing.

Watching those terrified hostages scramble to safety. Watching the brave officers risk their lives for our freedom. Watching the barrage of gunfire, hearing the hailstorm of bullets rain down on Martin Place. Unsure of what this meant.

Watching the gunman's demands and his threats, the Aussie expats sat in silence, imagining the future of our city, the shape and form it would take upon our return. What of its people?

Mourners gather to write condolence notes at Martin Place in Sydney. Picture: Richard Dobson Source: News Corp Australia

Pictures are telling the story to us Aussies overseas. Picture: Richard Dobson Source: News Corp Australia

The sense of community is incredible. Picture: Richard Dobson Source: News Corp Australia

This is incredible. Picture: Richard Dobson Source: News Corp Australia

Know there are countless Aussies reaching out from abroad and feeling the pain you feel. Know that we care, that we're watching, and wish we could pay our respects in person, at home, in Martin Place.

Our heart goes out to families, to the hostages, to the officers, to you all.

It strengthens me to know we're a united community, sharing in grief, united in pain, hopeful of the future.

Stay strong.


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‘This was just the trailer’

Pakistan begins the painful task of burying over 130 students who died during a Taliban killing spree at a military-run school, as anger rises among politicians. Mana Rabiee reports.

Unfolding ... A hospital security guard helps a student injured in the shootout at a school under attack by Taliban gunmen in Peshawar, Pakistan. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

THESE are the faces of the men who shot dead 141 people in cold blood, 132 of them children.

As Pakistan came to grips with the deadliest slaughter of innocents in the country, the Taliban released a dire warning on Wednesday, alongside the first images of the six men responsible for the attack; "this was just the trailer".

Claiming the massacre was justified because the Pakistan army had long been killing the innocent families of Taliban fighters, spokesman Mohammad Khurasani was defiant in his promise that the worst was yet to come, warning civilians to remove themselves from military institutions.

"We are still able to carry out major attacks. This was just the trailer," wrote Khurasani.

The gunmen, shot dead in the attack, are pictured behind a white Islamic banner.

This photo released in a statement by the Pakistani Taliban shows the Taliban fighters who stormed a military-run school in Peshawar, Pakistan on Tuesday, killing more than 140 people. Source: Supplied

A Pakistani army soldier walks past a bullet-riddled wall. Picture: Faroop Naeem Source: AFP

The bloodied ceremony hall at the army-run school a day after the attack. Picture: A Majeed Source: AFP

In an email, Pakistani Taliban spokesman Mohammad Khurasani claimed the attack was justified because the Pakistani army has allegedly long been killing innocent children and families of their fighters. Source: Supplied

Pakistan is mourning as the nation prepares for the mass funerals for the 141 victims, most of them children, killed in the Taliban attack on a military-run school in the country's northwest.

A three-day official mourning period started on Wednesday, a day after seven Taliban gunmen, explosives strapped to their bodies, stormed the army public school in the city of Peshawar.

Students were gunned down and some of the female teachers were burned alive.

Army commandos fought the Taliban in a daylong battle until the school was cleared and all the attackers dead.

The massacre horrified a nation already weary of unending terrorist attacks.

Bound in grief ... Indian schoolchildren prepare lit candles ahead of a vigil in the northern city of Jalandhar as they pay tribute to the slain Pakistani schoolchildren and staff. Picture: AFP PHOTO/SHAMMI MEHRA Source: AFP

ATTACK: Taliban bomb blast near US Embassy and Kabul Supreme Court

REVENGE: Afghan mum Reza Gul kills 25 Taliban after her son being killed

Witnesses described how a huge blast shook the Army Public School and six Taliban gunmen in government paramilitary uniforms went from classroom to classroom shooting children, some as young as 12.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for the assault, calling it revenge for a major military offensive in the region.

The militants had been ordered to shoot older students, a Taliban spokesman said.

Family grief ... The uncle and cousin of injured student Mohammad Baqair comfort him as he mourns the death of his mother, a teacher at the school. Picture: AP Source: AP

'THE MOST HEINOUS OF CRIMES': BISHOP

Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has vowed Australia will stand by Pakistan in the fight against terrorism.

"The killing of children is the most heinous of crimes," Ms Bishop said in a statement.

"We share a common sense of grief and outrage at this senseless attack."

She said such attacks only strengthened the resolve of nations committed to eradicating terrorism.

Earlier Prime Minister Tony Abbott couldn't find the words to describe the mixture of grief and fury felt by people around the world by this latest atrocity.

He said he hoped the bloodshed reminded people who might otherwise be attracted to terrorism that it is never right to kill innocent people.

Massacre ... Gunmen reportedly went from classroom to classroom shooting students. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

Tragic ... The wounded start arriving at a hospital for treatment. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

'I PLAYED DEAD': A BOY'S TALE OF TERROR

A teenage survivor described how he played dead to escape the militants as they rampaged through the school, hunting for people to kill.

Shahrukh Khan, 16, said he and his classmates ducked below their desks when four gunmen burst into their room.

"I saw a pair of big black boots coming towards me. This guy was probably hunting for students hiding beneath the benches," Khan told AFP from the trauma ward of the city's Lady Reading Hospital.

Khan decided to play dead after being shot in both legs, stuffing his tie into his mouth to stifle his screams.

"The man with big boots kept on looking for students and pumping bullets into their bodies. I lay as still as I could and closed my eyes, waiting to get shot again," he said.

Bloodshed ... an injured student receives treatment at a local hospital after the Taliban attack that least 141 people dead. Picture: AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

A NATION IN MOURNING

Distraught parents thronged the city's Lady Reading Hospital in the wake of the attack, weeping uncontrollably as children's bodies arrived, their school uniforms drenched in blood.

Irshadah Bibi, 40, whose 12-year-old son was among the dead, beat her face in grief, throwing herself against an ambulance.

Injured ... Pakistani volunteers help carry injured students into hospital. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

"O God, why did you snatch away my son? What is the sin of my child and all these children?" she wept.

"My son was in uniform in the morning. He is in a casket now," wailed one parent, Tahir Ali, as he came to the hospital to collect the body of his 14-year-old son Abdullah. "My son was my dream. My dream has been killed."

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was retaliation for the army's continuing operation against militants in the North Waziristan tribal area close to Peshawar.

"We are doing this because we want them to feel the pain of how terrible it is when your loved ones are killed," said TTP spokesman Muhammad Khorasani.

"We are taking this step so that their families should mourn as ours are mourning."

Heartbreaking ... The bodies of those killed are already being retrieved from hospitals. AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

Hospitals fill with injured ... Those not killed receive treatment for their wounds. Picture: AFP/ A Majeed Source: AFP

Police officials said the attack ended around 6.30pm local time, some eight hours after it began, with all six militants dead.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif described the attack as a "national tragedy unleashed by savages".

"These were my children. This is my loss. This is the nation's loss," he said.

Sharif vowed that the country would not be cowed by the violence and that the military would continue with an aggressive operation launched in June in the North Waziristan tribal area to rout militants.

"The fight will continue. No one should have any doubt about it," Sharif said.

Innocents ... Pakistani soldiers transport rescued schoolchildren after the Taliban attack on a school in Peshawar. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

INTERNATIONAL CONDEMNATION

US President Barack Obama condemned the attack and promised America will stand by Pakistan in its struggle against violent extremism.

"By targeting students and teachers in this heinous attack, terrorists have once again shown their depravity," he said.

"We stand with the people of Pakistan, and reiterate the commitment of the United States to support the government of Pakistan in its efforts to combat terrorism and extremism and to promote peace and stability in the region."

Teenage Nobel Peace laureate and education activist Malala Yousafzai, who was shot in the head by the Taliban in 2012 for campaigning for girls' right to an education, condemned the attack.

"I am heartbroken by this senseless and cold blooded act of terror in Peshawar that is unfolding before us. Innocent children in their school have no place in horror such as this," said Malala.

"I condemn these atrocious and cowardly acts and stand united with the government and armed forces of Pakistan whose efforts so far to address this horrific event are commendable."

Worst nightmare ... a Pakistani army soldier clears the area outside a school attacked by Taliban in Peshawar as anxious parent wait for news of their children. Picture: AFP Source: AP

Provincial information minister Mushtaq Ghani told AFP the death toll had reached 130, with a similar number wounded.

The toll was confirmed by another provincial minister.

Mudassar Abbas, a physics laboratory assistant at the school, said some students were celebrating at a party when the attack began.

"I saw six or seven people walking class-to-class and opening fire on children," he said.

Violence ... The students that survived were left bloody and injured. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

Carnage ... Rescue workers transport students from ambulances into hospitals. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

A student who survived the attack said soldiers came to rescue students during a lull in the firing.

"When we were coming out of the class we saw dead bodies of our friends lying in the corridors. They were bleeding. Some were shot three times, some four times," the student said.

"The men entered the rooms one by one and started indiscriminate firing at the staff and students."

The school on Peshawar's Warsak Road is part of the Army Public Schools and Colleges System, which runs 146 schools nationwide for the children of military personnel and civilians.

Bloodbath ... A wounded student said all the children had bullet wounds. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

The schools educate the children of both officers and non-commissioned soldiers and army wives often teach in them.

The attack began in the morning, with the Taliban shooting at random, said police officer Javed Khan.

Army commandos quickly arrived at the scene and exchanged fire with the gunmen, he said.

Outside the school, shooting was initially heard along with one loud bang of unknown origin.

Pakistani television showed soldiers surrounding the area and pushing people back.

On the scene ... Pakistani army troops arrived quickly to conduct an operation at the school. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

Later, one of the wounded students, Abdullah Jamal, said that he was with a group of 8th, 9th and 10th graders who were getting first-aid instructions and training with a team of Pakistani army medics when the violence began for real.

When the shooting started, Jamal, who was shot in the leg, said nobody knew what was going on in the first few seconds.

At the ready ... Pakistani soldiers take up position. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

"Then I saw children falling down who were crying and screaming. I also fell down. I learned later that I have got a bullet," he said, speaking from his hospital bed.

"All the children had bullet wounds. All the children were bleeding," Jamal added.

"This attack is a response to Zarb-e-Azab and the killing of Taliban fighters and harassing their families."

Zarb-e-Azb is the official name for the army's offensive against strongholds of the Taliban and other militants in North Waziristan.

The military has hailed the operation as a major success in disrupting the TTP's insurgency, which has killed thousands of Pakistanis since it erupted in 2007.

Safely out ... A plainclothes security officer escorts students rescued from a nearby school during the attack. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

Devastating ... Families wait for news and their loved ones at the hospital. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

'THEY ARE GOING FOR SOFT TARGETS'

More than 1600 militants have been killed since the launch of Zarb-e-Azb in June, according to data compiled by AFP from regular military statements.

Talat Masood, a retired general and security analyst, said the attack was intended to weaken the military's resolve.

"It is both tactical and strategic. The militants know they won't be able to strike at the heart of the military, they don't have the capacity because the army are prepared," Masood told AFP.

"So they are going for soft targets. These attacks have a great psychological impact."

Taliban attack ... A wounded Pakistani student receives treatment at a hospital. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

The semi-autonomous tribal areas that border Afghanistan have for years been a hide-out for Islamist militants of all stripes — including Al-Qaeda and the homegrown TTP as well as foreign fighters such as Uzbeks and Uighurs.

Washington pressed Islamabad for years to wipe out the sanctuaries in North Waziristan, which militants have used to launch attacks on NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Peshawar has been the target of frequent militant attacks in the past but has seen a relative lull recently.

India has condemned the latest attack by Taliban militants.

Awful ... Pakistani parents react to the news of the attack. Picture: AFP/ A Majeed Source: AFP

Home Minister Rajnath Singh said the attack in the north-western city of Peshawar exposed the "real face of terrorism".

"I strongly condemn the terrorist attack on a school at Peshawar," he tweeted. "This dastardly & inhuman attack exposes the real face of terrorism. My heart goes out to the families of those children who got killed by the terrorists in Peshawar."

India has repeatedly urged Pakistan to rein in militant groups operating on its soil.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars since independence in 1947, and deadly attacks on Mumbai by Pakistan-based militants dealt a blow to tentative peace talks in 2008.

Catastrophic ... Parents rush to the hospital to find their children. Picture: AP/Mohammad Sajjad Source: AP

French President Francois Hollande also condemned what he described as a "vile" attack on the school.

"No words can express the ignominy of such an attack against children in their school," said Mr

Germany also spoke about the "cruel cowardice" of the Taliban attack.

Bloody attack ... a family member escorts children from the school. Picture: AP Source: AP

Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in a statement he condemned the "criminal attack in the strongest terms".

"The hostage-taking and murder of children exceeds in its cruel cowardice all that Pakistan, stricken by years of terror and violence, has known before.

"We mourn with the people of Pakistan the victims of this bloody terrorist attack. Our hearts go out to the families of the victims. For the many injured we wish speedy recoveries."

Nation mourns ... Pakistani children pray during a candle light vigil for the victims of the Taliban attack. Picture: AP Photo/Fareed Khan Source: AP


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Russia is falling apart, Putin deflects blame

The Russian rouble crashed to unprecedented lows on Tuesday under the pressure of sanctions from the West.

THE Russian economy is in serious trouble as a result of a plummeting oil price and economic sanctions. Far from mission accomplished, it could actually be bad news for everyone.

Here's the gist of what's happening.

The value of the rouble is practically in free fall as the global oil price continues to crash. Oil has gone from a high of more than $100 a barrel in June to around $60 this week.

That has wreaked havoc on Russian government revenue, around half of which comes from the sale of oil and gas.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is under increasing pressure as the country's economic crisis deepens. Picture: Saurabh Das

At the same time, economic sanctions imposed by the West as a result of Russia's incursions into Ukraine and Crimea have prevented Russian companies refinancing their dollar and euro debts in Western capital markets.

Their foreign currency debts are quickly becoming unsustainable as the rouble falls. So they're selling off roubles, to buy dollars and euros, to pay off those debts. That's driving the currency down even further, as is the wave of ordinary Russians rushing to swap out their roubles for less volatile assets.

Pedestrians walk past a sign displaying the currency exchange rates on a street in Moscow, 12 December 2014. The Russian rouble is in near-free fall. Picture: Yuri Kochetkov Source: AP

Russia's Central Bank launched a desperate attempt on Monday to stop the sell-off, with an emergency interest rate hike from 10.5 per cent to 17 per cent — that's 650 basis points.

Higher interest rates in theory make the currency a more attractive investment, and therefore discourage selling.

It didn't work. The move failed to put the brakes on the slide, with the rouble hitting an unprecedented low of 80 to the US dollar — down a catastrophic 24 per cent — before making a modest improvement to trade at 72 to the dollar by late Tuesday afternoon.

"The situation is critical," deputy Central Bank chairman Sergei Shvetsov was quoted by Russian news agencies as saying. "We could not have imagined what is happening in our worst dreams."

PUTIN'S PROBLEM

Vladimir Putin, who has enjoyed huge levels of popular support through more than 15 years of oil-fuelled prosperity, is trying to deflect blame, accusing the West of inflicting economic pain on Russia in an attempt to force a regime change.

The real question is, how long will the Russian people believe him? As living standards fall through loss of savings, the flight of capital, rising unemployment and rising inflation, people could lose confidence in the government, leading to political instability.

Dr Leonid Petrov, an expert in strategic intelligence and visiting fellow at the ANU School of Asia and the Pacific, has warned that the Russian economic crisis may quickly develop into a global strategic crisis on par with, or worse than, the Cold War.

"Russia needs to maintain the slow-motion crisis in Eastern Ukraine, first to deflect attention from domestic economic issues and second to support Putin's approval rating," he said. "But pretty soon people are going to start asking questions."

Residents of Moscow have been buying up imported products in fear of price increases due to the depreciation of the rouble. Picture: Yuri Kochetkov Source: AP

If the instability continues, Moscow will pump more and more money into its military industrial complex — first, to shore up popular support by maintaining an artificially high level of employment through unproductive jobs; second, to prepare for further confrontation.

"The military build-up benefits the Putin regime both politically and economically," Dr Petrov said. "Already we have gone back to before where we were in 1991."

It's a feedback loop with potentially deadly implications: if the instability continues, Russia's oil-rich regions may decide they're better off going it alone. And as the domestic economic situation worsens, Russia may ratchet up external conflicts to distract attention.

US President Barack Obama committed to further sanctions on Tuesday, sparking fears of a retaliation. Ian Bremmer, president of the Eurasia Group, a political risk and consulting firm, told AP one potential global risk comes from Russia seeking to retaliate against the sanctions by stepping-up cyberattacks against US targets and asserting itself more aggressively in Ukraine and other nearby countries.

Writing in the Financial Times, Sergei Guriev, a former rector of the New Economic School in Moscow and professor of economics at Sciences Po in Paris, says it is now clear that the government and Central Bank have neither the strategy or a clear understanding of how to deal with the situation.

"The markets see a gathering storm but no captain," he writes. "In recent weeks, Russia's worst fears have become reality: the oil price has fallen; Asian markets have declined to bail out the nation's banks and companies; hopes for lifting sanctions have become even more illusory."

People walk past a shop window of the Central Department Store, decorated for Christmas, in Moscow, 16 December 2014. Picture: Pavel Golovkin Source: AP

RUSSIANS REACT

The rouble's collapse spurred Russians to rush out and buy imported cars, refrigerators, washing machines, TV sets and other major appliances in a bid to spend their roubles before stores put on new higher price tags.

"Now is the exact time to make all the purchases you've been putting off, because tomorrow there may already be another price," said Alexei Malakhov, a 27-year old IT worker who bought a Google phone for 18,000 roubles ($US250) at a Moscow electronics store.

Malakhov said he bought a washing machine two weeks ago, and its price has swelled by 25 per cent since then.

"We haven't bought everything we need, but there's no money left," he lamented.

Dmitry Rayenko, who works in sports marketing, bought a stove and a coffee maker.

"You have to be philosophical about it — buy what you need now," the 45-year-old said. "We're in an economic war, so it's unlikely it will get better in the near term."

Meanwhile on Tuesday, Apple announced it was stopping online sales of iPhones, iPads and other products, saying the rouble's instability had made it too difficult to set prices in Russia.

GALLOWS HUMOUR

The Russian people have greeted the situation with jokes.

Dark times call for dark humour, especially in Russia, where wags are saying the rouble has now fallen below the psychologically important threshold of "I no longer give a damn".

New jokes popped up on social media, as Russians again fell back on gallows-humour to ride out yet another economic storm.

An electronic information panel displays the latest currency exchange rates outside a shopping centre in Moscow, 16 December 2014. Picture: Maxim Shipenkov Source: AP

"Two roubles ago I brewed my tea and it is still warm," quipped one Russian on Twitter.

"While I typed this tweet, the dollar went up by 3 roubles," quipped another.

Predictably, many in war-torn Ukraine, where the hryvnia has lost half its value this year, could not but gloat.

"A man runs into a currency exchange booth in Moscow," goes a joke posted by Kiev-based Aleksey Solntsev on Twitter. "Do you have any dollars or euros? No! So what do you have? Hryvnia. That will do!"

Some poked fun at Russia's tightly-controlled political system, with many officials expected to pin the blame for the economic turmoil on external enemies.

"The LED display boards of Moscow exchange booths are erroneously showing the euro rate according to Fahrenheit and not Celsius," joked MID Roissi, a satirical Twitter account that parodies the Russian foreign ministry feed. "The Investigative Committee is now probing the malfunction."

"When the dollar is worth 666 roubles, it will be possible to chalk it all up to Satan's schemes," went another tweet.

Some of the humour cut rather close to the bone.

"When oil and gas run out soon, roubles can be used to heat people's homes."


23.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Babies born from grandmas’ wombs

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 03 Desember 2014 | 23.26

Medical maravel...the Swedish team performing a womb transplant surgery. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

IN a medical first, two baby boys have been born after their grandmothers' wombs were transplanted into their mothers.

The transplants and healthy births, which took place in Sweden, were possible after the grandmothers donated their wombs to their daughters via hysterectomies.

The medical breakthrough may give hope to women who want children but were born without a womb or had it removed.

One of the boys was born to a 29-year-old Swedish woman who was born without a womb, while the second mother, who is 34, had her womb removed when being treated for cancer in her 20s.

The news comes after the first successful womb transplant baby was born in Sweden in October.

The two mothers were part of a group of nine women who were given experimental womb transplants. Seven of them have now successfully given birth.

"That's a very good success rate for a new surgery like this," the British Fertility Society's Allan Pacey told The Daily Mail.

"Women would much prefer to have their own baby and be pregnant than watch another woman be pregnant."

Breakthrough...the procedure could give hope to women who hope to have children but were born without a womb or had their womb removed. Picture: Thinkstock Source: ThinkStock

For the procedure, doctors first removed the daughter's eggs and fertilise them and freeze them.

Then, surgeons remove the mother's womb in a 10-hour operation similar to a hysterectomy. The donated womb is then transplanted into the daughter. After a year, once the transplant is definitely a success, doctors thaw one of her embryos and implant it in the womb.

Doctors praised the generosity of the grandmothers who donated their wombs so their daughters could fulfil their dreams of becoming mums.

"It's an absolutely extraordinary gift," said foetal medicine professor at King's College, Henrik Hagberg.

"It is probably the best thing you can do for your daughter. The mothers were still very much doubting whether things would really go well. You don't take anything for granted when you have experienced all of the problems they have been through," he said.

The babies were both delivered via Caesarean around a month early.

Some doctors are now planning to do similar transplants using wombs from brain -dead women, reports the Daily Mail.

The mother of the first transplant baby named him Vincent - which means 'to conquer' - in tribute to the great lengths she went to to become a mother.

"As soon as I felt this perfect baby boy on my chest, I had tears of happiness and enormous relief," she said in October, after Vincent's birth was revealed to the world. In that case, a friend who was 61 and had gone through menopause donated the womb.

"I felt like a mother the first time I touched my baby and was amazed that we finally did it. I have always had this large sorrow because I never thought I would be a mother – and now the impossible has become real."


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Actor reveals secret gay wedding

Eloped ... Saffron Burrows has revealed she wed her girlfriend more than a year ago. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

FORMER Law & Order actor Saffron Burrows has surprised many by revealing she has married a woman, just years after her ex-fiance Alan Cumming married a man.

The Circle of Friends star told The Guardian that she and Alison Balian, a writer on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, eloped last August.

Wife ... Alison Balian, seen here in a clip from The Ellen DeGeneres Show. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

The relationship however is not new — the pair have been together for more than six years and have a two-year-old son together.

"We hadn't told anyone (about the wedding) and then I called my mum and she said, "You haven't eloped! You only elope when you're young and in trouble!'" she said.

"I want to be very straightforward about my life," she said. "I don't want to hesitate and feel hindered by something I haven't said.

"For my boy, I want to be honest with him because he deserves it," she continued. "I want us to live a very honest life with each other. I think for a while I was just avoiding conversations, in order to not be labelled in some way that I felt was limiting and not actually true to who I am. I really salute these young women who come out, but if I said I was gay that wouldn't be true."

Former fiance ... Saffron Burrows and Alan Cumming were once engaged to each other but now both have same sex spouses. Picture: Supplied. Source: News Corp Australia

Burrows was involved in a relationship with director Mike Figgis for several years and was once engaged to Circle of Friends co-star Alan Cumming, who is also bisexual and wed his illustrator partner, Grant Shaffer in 2007.

"I've loved some really incredible men and some really incredible women," she added. "There's no coming out to do because I've always just followed my heart and I was lucky enough to have parents who didn't impose any bigotry on me.

"So to come out would actually be an untruth because the men I've loved were very vivid, real, loving relationships. So I'm with this woman now who's extraordinary and that's what we're doing," she said.

Movie star ... Saffron Burrows and Jason Statham in a scene from film The Bank Job. Picture: Supplied. Source: News Corp Australia


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Aussie families take action over MH17

Aerial video has been released showing the progress of efforts to collect debris from the crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, four months after the plane was brought down. Courtesy of Ru-RTR

Members of the Ukrainian State Emergency Service search for bodies in a field near the crash site of the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17. AFP/ BULENT KILIC Source: AFP

AUSTRALIAN families caught up in the MH17 disaster are preparing to sue Russia, the Ukraine and Malaysia over the loss of their loved ones, as well as Malaysia Airlines.

Aviation lawyer Jerry Skinner is representing eight Australian families bereaved by the tragedy, from New South Wales, Canberra, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia.

MH17: Malaysia Airlines facing legal action over flight path

A total of 38 Australian residents and citizens were among the 298 passengers and crew on board the Malaysia Airlines' flight, when it was shot down over eastern Ukraine on July 17.

Final journey...The wreck of MH17 is being moved from the crash area by train to The Netherlands, where the aircraft will be reassembled for investigation. Picture: Ella Pellegrini Source: News Corp Australia

Mr Skinner — a specialist in aviation claims, based in Alaska — said he was awaiting further information before filing in the European Court of Human Rights but warned the case would be "very broad".

"We don't want to file an action that's incomplete," said Mr Skinner who negotiated a $2.7 billion settlement for the 270 victims with Libya over the 1988 Lockerbie disaster.

"This is a very complicated matter."

Mr Skinner expressed surprise that a German mother had filed solely against the Ukraine for failing to close airspace over the war zone, suggesting the case was shortsighted.

Professor Elmar Giemulla is acting for the woman who is seeking $1.2 million from the Ukraine for "negligent homicide".

On the move...Parts of the wreckage of the Malaysia Airlines' Flight MH17 are removed and loaded on a truck at the crash site near the village of Grabove in eastern Ukraine. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

Prof Giemulla told News Corp he hoped other families with loved ones on board MH17 followed suit.

"It is a very political case and it needs public attendance," said Prof Giemulla.

"Each government bears responsibility for its state territory which the airspace is part of.

"If a government is not in a position to settle disputes on the ground with a possible involvement of the airspace, then this government must close its airspace."

He said he did not intend to sue Malaysia Airlines because they had "reacted not unreasonably".

"The centre of gravity of wrongs rests with the Ukraine," Prof Giemulla said.

"The global community must rely on the responsibility flowing from the aspect of sovereignty."

Protests during the November G20 summit in Brisbane pointed the finger at Russia and President Vladimir Putin. Picture: AP Photo Source: AP

Mr Skinner rejected the notion the Ukraine should bear sole responsibility for the tragedy but said he was waiting on information currently with lead investigative agency, the Dutch Safety Board.

"Everybody has a pretty good idea of why the plane crashed," he said.

"What we need is the political information obtained that identifies the actors who made the operational decisions."

The matter of compensation was likely to be included in any lawsuit which could be lodged as early as April or May next year, Mr Skinner said.

Malaysia Airlines has always insisted it will meet its obligation to compensate relatives of those killed when the Boeing 777 was shot down on July 17.

Under the Montreal Convention, the airline is liable to pay about $180,000 compensation for each life lost.


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Kim Jong-un bans Kim Jong-un

Something to smile about ... Kim Jong-un has banned anyone from having his name. Picture: AFP/KCNA via KNS Republic of Korea Source: AFP

IN North Korea, there can be only one Kim Jong-un.

A South Korean official said Pyongyang forbids its people from using the same name as the young absolute leader.

The measure appears meant to bolster a personality cult surrounding Kim, who took over after the death of his dictator father Kim Jong-il in late 2011.

Seoul officials have said Pyongyang also banned the use of the names of Kim Jong-il and the country's founder, Kim Il-sung.

The South Korean official said Kim Jong-il in early 2011 ordered citizens with the same name as his son to get new names and demanded that authorities reject birth registrations of newborn babies with the name. Names had to be revised on official documents, including social security cards and school diplomas.

The official requested anonymity because he wasn't authorised to speak publicly and refused to disclose how the information was obtained.

Absolute leader ... Pyongyang also banned the use of the names of Kim Jong-il (pictured) and the country's founder, Kim Il-sung. Picture: AFP/KCNA via KNS Source: AFP

However, an internal state document obtained by South Korea's KBS TV stationcontains an "administrative order" issued by then leader Kim Jong-il in January 2011 for all party, army and police officials to ensure the directive was carried out.

"All party organs and public security authorities should make a list of residents named Kim Jong-un … and train them to voluntarily change their names," said the document.

"Authorities should make sure that there is no one making unnecessary complaints or spreading gossip … regarding this project," it added.

Kim Jong-un made his international debut in late 2010 when he was awarded a slew of top political jobs. His father, who reportedly suffered a stroke in 2008, was seen as moving fast to hand over power so his family could rule for a third generation.

Kim Jong-il inherited power in 1994 when his father Kim Il-sung died.

North Korea enforces strict, state-organised public reverence of the Kim family, which serves as the backbone of the family's authoritarian rule of the impoverished country. The North is locked in a long-running international standoff over its nuclear ambitions.

All North Koreans are required to wear lapel pins bearing the images of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il and to put the leaders' portraits on the walls of their homes. Their birthdays are considered the most important holidays in North Korea.


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Actor reveals secret gay wedding

Eloped ... Saffron Burrows has revealed she wed her girlfriend more than a year ago. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

FORMER Law & Order actor Saffron Burrows has surprised many by revealing she has married a woman, just years after her ex-fiance Alan Cumming married a man.

The Circle of Friends star told The Guardian that she and Alison Balian, a writer on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, eloped last August.

Wife ... Alison Balian, seen here in a clip from The Ellen DeGeneres Show. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

The relationship however is not new — the pair have been together for more than six years and have a two-year-old son together.

"We hadn't told anyone (about the wedding) and then I called my mum and she said, "You haven't eloped! You only elope when you're young and in trouble!'" she said.

"I want to be very straightforward about my life," she said. "I don't want to hesitate and feel hindered by something I haven't said.

"For my boy, I want to be honest with him because he deserves it," she continued. "I want us to live a very honest life with each other. I think for a while I was just avoiding conversations, in order to not be labelled in some way that I felt was limiting and not actually true to who I am. I really salute these young women who come out, but if I said I was gay that wouldn't be true."

Former fiance ... Saffron Burrows and Alan Cumming were once engaged to each other but now both have same sex spouses. Picture: Supplied. Source: News Corp Australia

Burrows was involved in a relationship with director Mike Figgis for several years and was once engaged to Circle of Friends co-star Alan Cumming, who is also bisexual and wed his illustrator partner, Grant Shaffer in 2007.

"I've loved some really incredible men and some really incredible women," she added. "There's no coming out to do because I've always just followed my heart and I was lucky enough to have parents who didn't impose any bigotry on me.

"So to come out would actually be an untruth because the men I've loved were very vivid, real, loving relationships. So I'm with this woman now who's extraordinary and that's what we're doing," she said.

Movie star ... Saffron Burrows and Jason Statham in a scene from film The Bank Job. Picture: Supplied. Source: News Corp Australia


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Man’s ashes taken to 100 countries

Heartbreaking ... CJ Twomey took his own life in 2010 at age 20. Picture: Facebook/Scattering CJ Source: Supplied

A YEAR ago, a grieving mother set up a Facebook page asking people to scatter her son's ashes around the world.

Thanks to the kindness of strangers, the young man's ashes have been taken to more than 100 countries — and even to outer space.

"I have never experienced such a collective sort of hug," mother Hallie Twomey, from Maine in the United States, told AP in October. "I feel less alone, and for me that has been huge."

Mrs Twomey's son, CJ Twomey, took his own life on April 14, 2010, at age 20 after an argument with his parents.

The former member of the US air force loved adventure but didn't get a chance to see much of the world.

Under the sea ... a stranger named Tina scattered CJ's ashes at Reuben Coral Reef, just off Saona Island near Dominican Republic, on March 14, 2014. Picture: Facebook/Scattering CJ Source: Supplied

Kind-hearted ... US snowboarder Justin Reiter scattered CJ's ashes in Russia during the Sochi Winter Olympics. Picture: Facebook/Scattering CJ Source: Supplied

In November last year, Mrs Twomey was looking at the urn filled with CJ's ashes and decided to send him on a journey.

She set up a Facebook page called Scattering CJ, calling on strangers to "send her beloved son on one final journey." The page has more than 19,000 likes.

"Scattering CJ is my attempt to give my son something. It's a mission to show my son — my crazy, life of the party, lover of people, smile so wide it entered a room before he did son — some of the world that he never got to see. It's an effort to allow my child to forever rest in locations hand picked by caring friends, family and strangers alike," Mrs Twomey wrote.

She has mailed hundreds of packets of her son's ashes to strangers worldwide, from Saudi Arabia to Thailand to Denmark.

Giving thanks ... one kind-hearted stranger scattered CJ's ashes in New York City during the Thanksgiving Macy's Day parade in November. Picture: Facebook/Scattering CJ Source: Supplied

Iconic ... in August, a traveller took CJ's ashes to the Taj Mahal in Agra, India. Picture: Facebook/Scattering CJ Source: Supplied

In October, a rocket containing a vial of CJ's ashes was launched into space from the desert in New Mexico. The rocket spent a few minutes in space before landing in the nearby White Sands Missile Range.

"Really, why would a complete stranger want to help us?" Mrs Twomey told AP in December last year. "I really think people are doing whatever they can, even if it's a small thing, to ease our burden or to embrace life."

Outer space ... in October, a rocket containing a vial of CJ's ashes was launched into space from the desert in New Mexico. Picture: Facebook/Scattering CJ courtesy of John Ottoway Source: Supplied


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Tears as Santa hauled off by police

Bad Santa ... Father Christmas hops into a police van after the end of the parade, prompting some children to burst into tears. Picture: Wales Online Source: Supplied

CHILDREN were left sobbing and traumatised after seeing Santa hauled away in a police riot van after a family Christmas parade.

The not-so-merry incident occurred after Santa attended a holiday parade in Aberdare, Wales, before hopping into a police vehicle at the end, reports South Wales Evening Post.

Shocked children started crying when they saw Santa Claus apparently being taken away by police officers.

Furious parents have slammed the parade organisers for upsetting their kids.

"There were a lot of tears. People couldn't believe it actually happened. My four-year-old cousin started crying, saying 'Santa can't bring me toys now," said Jade Hughes, who said the shock ending to Santa's day out ruined a "fantastic event".

"It was very professional until that happened — a great family day but we were very let down by this error," said Hughes.

Holiday shock ... Santa waves to children while taking part in the parade in Aberdare, Wales. Picture: Twitter/Deano4lyf Source: Supplied

"Santa was there with the reindeer waving his sleigh. Really nice. Then the police van reversed, the side door was opened. He got up, walked to the van, jumped in and took off," said Hughes.

"Children started crying while some just looked on in disbelief. It was a fab event until then."

However, cops say they were just helping Santa travel safely on his way back to The North Pole.

"Santa obviously has a busy month ahead. So when he asked if we could provide transport at the end of his sleigh ride through Aberdare town centre to help him get back to the North Pole, we were happy to oblige," a South Wales Police spokesman said.


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Man snaps neck on roller-coaster

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 29 Oktober 2014 | 23.26

Wild ride ... Robert Sycamore broke his neck on the Grand National roller-coaster at Blackpool Pleasure Beach. Picture: WillMcC/Wikimedia Commons Source: Supplied

A MAN has been left paralysed after he broke his neck riding a roller-coaster with his great nephew.

Robert Sycamore, 58, was riding the 80kph Grand National roller-coaster at Blackpool Pleasure Beach in Lancashire, England, when the freak accident occurred, the Mirror reports.

"My son was with him and he's come back screaming," said Darren Parlour, Mr Sycamore's nephew. "Rob's a big bloke and he was down in the footwell of the carriage.

"His ear was on his shoulder and he was totally blue and black. His neck snapped — the muscles collapsed and he's just melted into the seat.

"I climbed in with Rob and was holding his head so it didn't move. The emergency services were unbelievable — how he stayed alive, I don't know."

"Safe" ... a park spokesman said there were no faults found with the ride. Picture: Franz Heinrich/Wikimedia Commons Source: Supplied

Mr Sycamore is currently on a life support machine and the family has been told he will not be able to use his body, the Mirror reports.

He is understood to suffer from spondylitis, or inflammation of the vertebrae in the back, but it is unclear if this condition contributed to his injury.

A Pleasure Beach spokesman insisted the 70-year-old wooden roller-coaster is safe and that no faults were found with the ride.


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Man snaps neck on roller-coaster

Wild ride ... Robert Sycamore broke his neck on the Grand National roller-coaster at Blackpool Pleasure Beach. Picture: WillMcC/Wikimedia Commons Source: Supplied

A MAN has been left paralysed after he broke his neck riding a roller-coaster with his great nephew.

Robert Sycamore, 58, was riding the 80kph Grand National roller-coaster at Blackpool Pleasure Beach in Lancashire, England, when the freak accident occurred, the Mirror reports.

"My son was with him and he's come back screaming," said Darren Parlour, Mr Sycamore's nephew. "Rob's a big bloke and he was down in the footwell of the carriage.

"His ear was on his shoulder and he was totally blue and black. His neck snapped — the muscles collapsed and he's just melted into the seat.

"I climbed in with Rob and was holding his head so it didn't move. The emergency services were unbelievable — how he stayed alive, I don't know."

"Safe" ... a park spokesman said there were no faults found with the ride. Picture: Franz Heinrich/Wikimedia Commons Source: Supplied

Mr Sycamore is currently on a life support machine and the family has been told he will not be able to use his body, the Mirror reports.

He is understood to suffer from spondylitis, or inflammation of the vertebrae in the back, but it is unclear if this condition contributed to his injury.

A Pleasure Beach spokesman insisted the 70-year-old wooden roller-coaster is safe and that no faults were found with the ride.


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Hyland opens up on ‘abusive boyfriend’

Speaking out ... Actress Sarah Hyland has spoken about her allegedly abusive ex boyfriend. Picture: Jason Merritt/Getty Images. Source: Getty Images

MODERN Family star Sarah Hyland has spoken publicly for the first time about her allegedly abusive ex-boyfriend Matt Prokop.

Appearing on The Meredith Viera Show in the US, Highland quoted from two poems when asked by Viera how she had coped with her experience.

"There are two quotes that I want to say," the 23-year-old told Viera, who was also the victim of domestic abuse in her early twenties.

"One is a Dylan Thomas poem: 'Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the dying of the light,' which is one of my favourite poems. It just strikes a chord in me."

Happier times ... Sarah Hyland and Matt Prokop. Picture: Instagram Source: Supplied

Hyland also cited a Robert Frost quote: 'The only way out is through' as helping her through her difficult time.

"People have to go through things in order to become the person they are today, and that's that," she said.

Hyland was granted a restraining order against Prokop, which also states that he must stay away from the actor' dog, Barkley Bixby (who appeared with her on the show).

Sydney ... Modern Family star Sarah Hyland in Australia with Matt Prokop. Picture: Splash. Source: Splash News Australia

Hyland was initially granted a temporary restraining order against the actor after accusing him of terrorising her verbally and physically during the last four years of their relationship (the ex-couple were together for five years).

Prokop also allegedly pinned her against a car during an argument about her outfit in May before repeatedly calling her a 'c**t' and choking her.

Hayman Island ... Sarah Hyland and Matt Prokop. Picture: Instagram. Source: Supplied

The Emmy Award-winner stated in the court documents: "His grip was so tight that I could not breathe or speak. I was scared and in fear for my life."

Following their split, Hyland claimed that Prokop "relentlessly bombarded me with vile, threatening and emotionally disturbing texts and voicemails including his own suicide threats".

Family ... Sarah Hyland, centre, with her Modern Family castmates. Picture: AP Source: AP

The two started dating after meeting while auditioning for High School Musical 3: Senior Year in 2008.

They later starred together in the Disney Channel film Geek Charming in 2011


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Man beheads woman in New York

There has been a grisly murder-suicide in New York City. Source: NewsComAu

A MAN has beheaded a woman then jumped in front of a moving train in New York in an apparent murder-suicide.

A man in his 30s is believed to have cut off the head of a woman in her 60s before jumping in front of an eastbound Long Island Rail Road train on Tuesday night, NBC 4 New York reports.

Investigators believe that the woman may be the mother of the man.

Her body was found outside an apartment complex in Farmingdale, Long Island, east of Manhattan, with the head severed. Nassau County police have cordoned off a number of blocks on Secatogue Ave as they investigate the incident and multiple sheets have been placed over the body, CBS 2 reports.

The man's body was found about 800m away, after the train hit him east of Bethpage railway station, police said.

Officials said that the incident appeared to be related to domestic violence, not terrorism.

The Long Island Rail Road line was shut down and passengers were transferred to another train, before being moved onto buses at another station.

The names of the victims have not been released.


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Foo Fighters announce tour dates

The HBO Original Series, Foo Fighters Sonic Highways premieres Friday, October 17 at 11PM, only on HBO.

DAVE Grohl has an open invitation to the White House.

The Foo Fighters frontman and filmmaker didn't believe it either when President Barack Obama first suggested he could "just come over". Bring the family. Hang out.

He tested the invite after he was granted an interview with the President of the United States for his Sonic Highways documentary series.

The series both shines a light on the rich musical history of eight key cities of America and captures the making of the much-loved rock band's eighth record.

STRIPPERS: What reunited Dave Grohl and Courtney Love

Eight songs recorded in eight weeks ... How Foo Fighters' Sonic Highways was created. Picture: Ringo Starr Source: Supplied

Grohl wanted to talk to the country's boss about America as the land of dreams. And pick his brain about music, particularly after spying a hefty volume of Bob Dylan's lyrics in a White House library during a previous visit.

Their conversation aired in the first episode of Sonic Highways filmed in Chicago where they also recorded the album's opening track Something From Nothing.

"We talked about music for a while and afterwards he said 'Bring the family next time, just come over'. And I said 'Oh yeah, I'll just come over to the White House. And he said, "No, really. Come on over'," Grohl says, sitting in the band's Studio 606 in suburban Los Angeles.

"So a couple of weeks later, I had my daughter on a daddy trip, just the two of us, and I told her she could go anywhere in the world, and she said Virginia (Grohl's birthplace).

"I asked her if she wanted to go to the White House while we're over there. So we went to the White House. Believe me, I understand it's nuts."

Inspired by his interviews ... Dave Grohl wrote the lyrics for each new song on the final day. Picture: Kevin Mazur Source: Supplied

It would have been nuts for Grohl and his band mates to contemplate such an epic undertaking as Sonic Highways 20 years ago when he formed Foo Fighters in the wake of Kurt Cobain's death, bringing the curtain down abruptly on his former band, Nirvana.

The idea was to record a song in famed studios in Chicago, Washington D.C., New Orleans, Los Angeles, New York, Nashville, Seattle and Austin.

FOO FIGHTERS AT SFS

Fear of creative malaise may have fuelled Grohl's vision but it was the success of his film Sound City, about the influential LA studio where everyone from Neil Young to Nirvana recorded seminal albums, which cemented his desire to make the documentary.

The passionate music man wanted to inspire others to reconnect with the art form in an age where sound is ubiquitous.

Band of brothers ... Foo Fighters want to inspire fans to fall in love with music again. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

"People would tell me they stopped listening to music because it's on the iPod or in the cloud and there's too much to choose from and to me, that just means you are not inspired to go and find it. You have to instil that motivation, get people inspired to fall in love with it, otherwise it's just a sound," he says.

"Not everyone said 'Wow, what a cool idea for a music series'. We got the foot in the door (with HBO) and we realised 'F---! Now we really have to do it because who else is going to f---ing do it?'"

With producer Butch Vig in tow, they spent a week in each city throughout May and June, with Grohl interviewing musicians and the musically minded from Buddy Guy to Nora Guthrie, the daughter of revered American folk singer Woody and sister of Arlo.

The band recorded the musical skeletons they had demoed back in Los Angeles and Grohl would write the lyrics on the final day, drawing phrases and stories from his interviews.

His four band mates Taylor Hawkins, Nate Mendel, Chris Shiflett and Pat Smear all agree the early sessions to write the music before they hit the road were tough.

Pre-production sessions were tough ... Foo Fighters' drummer Taylor Hawkins. Picture: Andrew Stuart Source: Supplied

"We demoed things six times and they wouldn't change. I could see this unfulfilled feeling in Dave a lot of the time. At one point he said 'This sounds like the record we threw away back in 2002 or whatever'," drummer Hawkins says.

"I remember going 'What's wrong, dude? What are you looking for? He got us to this point and pushed it and pushed it to the point of mental exhaustion about how to do these songs.

"I think in a way he meant to push us to the limit of what we could do and play as a band. And then let it go. You did all that prep and then it's 'Press record. You guys sound great'."

Once on the road, away from making lunches and doing the school runs with the children, there were plenty of good, hilarious and just plain awkward times.

Like the magnificent feast of whole pig stuffed with sausage and wrapped with bacon that was slow-cooked on a smoker by Zac Brown's chef.

Or playing a free street party with Arcade Fire and Trombone Shorty in New Orleans after recording in the legendary Preservation Hall, one of the homes of jazz.

Recording at the legendary Preservation Hall in New Orleans ... Foo Fighters' Chris Shiflett and Taylor Hawkins. Picture: Andrew Stuart Source: Supplied

Or hearing Nora Guthrie's stories about repeatedly telling Bob Dylan to go away when he kept turning up at the family home and asking to meet her father. Arlo eventually invited him in.

Perhaps the most awkward moment was when Grohl, Shiflett and Smear decided to visit a Bikini Barista, a coffee kiosk staffed by scantily clad staff, in Seattle.

Surprisingly their barista didn't recognise them.

Smear suggests she may have been too young to clock the famous rockers.

"We were so terrified, honestly, we hardly showed our faces. I ordered from the back of my head. It was altogether creepy," Grohl says.

Sonic Highways ceases to be about the pictures and about the stadiums when the series winds up and the world your winds up.

For a change, Foo Fighters will start rather than finish their musical race around the world in the southern hemisphere with stadium concerts, supported by Rise Against, in February.

They played some epic concerts lasting up to three hours to introduce their previous record, Wasting Light — so will four hours be the go for Sonic Highways, particularly as some of the album tracks clock in well over the five minute mark?

Sonic Highways recording sessions ... Dave Grohl and Pat Smear hang out in the Californian desert for Sonic Highways. Picture: Andrew Stuart Source: Supplied

The band members are horrified by the prospect.

"I like playing until they're done," Smear says.

HEAR: Sonic Highways is out on November 10. The series airs on Go!, Saturday, 4.30pm

SEE: Foo Fighters, Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane, February 24, ticketek.com.au; ANZ Stadium, Sydney, February 26, ticketek.com.au; Etihad Stadium, Melbourne, February 28, ticketmaster.com.au; Derwent Entertainment Centre, Hobart, March 2, ticketmaster.com.au; Coopers Stadium, Adelaide, March 4, ticketek.com.au and nib Stadium, Perth, March 7, ticketmaster.com.au.

Frontier Members pre-sale on November 11 (check frontiertouring.com for more details) with general public tickets available from 10am on November 13

FOO FIGHTERS @ GOAT ISLAND


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