| | A small number of people are being treated for stab wounds in Melbourne's CBD and police have arrested a man after being called to reports of a car fire. | | | The White House press secretary — who is upfront in accusing media of sharing "fake news" — tweets a video which analysts claim contains extra frames to make it appear Jim Acosta struck a female intern. | | | Australia makes a confident start with the bat before South Africa's bowlers take control of the second one-day international in Adelaide. Follow all the action in our live ScoreCentre. | | | A large medical team at Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital takes about six hours to separate Nima and Dawa Pelden, who were joined at the chest and shared a liver. | | | It's actually heartbreaking the extent to which women who've been sexually harassed, even though they tried to play by the rules, avoid a fuss and protect their professional reputations, now find themselves painfully centre stage in a media and legal circus, writes Annabel Crabb. | | | The inquest into 2016's deadly thunderstorm asthma event, in which 10 people died, heard that some callers to emergency services would have made other arrangements for getting to hospital if they had known ambulances were delayed. | | | Accused Bourke Street driver James Gargasoulas managed to evade arrest despite briefly being boxed in by police at gunpoint in the hours before he ploughed through pedestrians in Melbourne's CBD, a court hears. | | | Is this the bowling equivalent of switch-hitting, and should it be legal? A young Indian spinner has been barred by umpires from doing a 360-degree twirl before bowling the ball. | | | We don't know why former marine Ian David Long carried out the mass shooting in southern California, but if his military service contributed to the motivation or the means, it would not be a first, writes Philip Williams. | | | Two lovebirds who carved their names into the rock atop of a culturally significant mountain in south-east Queensland are being scorned on social media, and face the possibility of massive fines or jail if caught. | | | The Oscar winner's barrister tells a Sydney court the actor earned $128,000 a month before stories alleging he behaved inappropriately to a female colleague were published, but now is too scared to work. | | | A runaway train deliberately derailed in north-west Tasmania two months ago was not responding to commands from the driver, an interim report finds. | | | A second large earthquake in two months strikes Western Australia's Lake Muir area, waking residents and shaking buildings hundreds of kilometres away in Perth and across the state's south-west. | | | At the core of Malcolm Turnbull's inability to explain the leadership implosion is incredulity at the conduct of colleagues, writes Greg Jennett. | | | Malcolm Turnbull's Q&A appearance reignites tensions within the Liberal Party, with frontbencher Christopher Pyne declaring Cabinet colleagues "have to be responsible" for their actions in ousting the former prime minister. | | | Andy Factor survived the "night of broken glass" in Germany in 1938 and can still recall the shattering noise. But exactly 80 years later, it's the rising sound of white nationalism that has him scared. | | | The Prince of Wales, who turns 70 next week, tells a BBC documentary crew that his role as sovereign will be very different to his life as heir to the throne. | | | When Hiroko discovered she may have failed her medical university entrance process in Japan just because she was a woman, her disappointment turned into anger. Since then, the scandal in the country has snowballed. | | | Donald Trump has said he'll deploy soldiers at the border to meet them, but for Hilda and the 5000-strong caravan of migrants from Central America, there's no turning back. | | | China's state-run Xinhua news agency releases footage of its newest stars: virtual news presenters, which use artificial intelligence to copy human voices and facial expressions. | | | The country that has perhaps been most vocal about journalist Jamal Khashoggi's death is also a world leader in locking up reporters. | | | One small error left a Brisbane couple in financial limbo for almost two years after a public servant missed a court mistake that listed them as debtors instead of creditors. | | | Hobart's median house price looks set to overtake Perth's, but Tasmania's property price boom is not just restricted to the capital, with properties in smaller towns being snapped up. | | | By chief foreign correspondent Philip Williams | | | By Annabel Crabb | | | By business reporter Andrew Robertson | | | By Dr Ros McDougall for ABC Top 5 | | | | | The ABC sent this message to starnewsposting@gmail.com these details are included to help provide assurance that this is a genuine email from ABC.
Any personal details and data acquired by the ABC from your participation in any ABC Online Services will be used only in accordance with the ABC's Privacy Policy.
This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, AAP, CNN and the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced. | | | | |
0 comments:
Post a Comment