Categories
Business

Economists deeply divided over Reserve Bank’s likely interest rate trajectory

Deep divisions are emerging among some of Australia’s leading bank economists on their outlook for interest rates and the Australian economy.

In one camp are those, such as the economists at Westpac and ANZ, who believe that the cash rate target will pass 3 per cent before the end of this year.

Both are tipping the RBA’s benchmark official rate to peak at 3.35 per cent — it is currently 1.85 per cent — meaning interest rates would almost double from where they are, rising by another 1.5 percentage points over the next six months or so.

The cash rate target was just 0.1 per cent at the beginning of May.

In fact, Westpac’s chief economist Bill Evans is not only predicting the cash rate will get to 3.35 per cent, but arguing it must if the Reserve Bank is serious about bringing down inflation.

Westpac and CBA logos
Westpac is expecting the cash rate to hit 3.35 per cent, but CBA thinks it will top out at 2.6 per cent before falling next year.(abcnews)

“The key reason why we insist that a sharper slowdown in demand is required in 2023 is that a much stronger set of demand conditions … runs the risk of resilient high inflationary expectations,” he wrote in response to the RBA’s Statement on Monetary Policy, released on Friday.

The Reserve Bank used market forecasts of a 3 per cent cash rate to underpin its latest economic forecasts, which did not have inflation falling back even to the top of its 2–3 per cent target range until the end of 2024.

Mr Evans said those forecasts showed that the RBA should raise rates more aggressively, even at the expense of slower economic growth — Westpac’s modeling tips annual economic growth of just 1 per cent next year if rates hit 3.35 per cent.

“Such an approach would give the bank the best chance of managing this difficult task of returning inflationary expectations to more normal levels and deflating the current ‘inflationary psychology’ which is now at risk of taking hold,” he said.

Too many rate rises could ‘take the economy backwards’

Then there is the other camp of economists, represented by the Commonwealth Bank and NAB among the big four, who cannot see the cash rate getting above 3 per cent in the near future.

“I don’t think it’s likely to happen because I think the Reserve Bank, once they get the cash rate to around their estimate of neutral [somewhere near 2.5 per cent]will want to pause and actually see how the economy’s responding to the rate hikes that they’ve delivered,” CBA’s head of Australian economics Gareth Aird told RN Breakfast.

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Is Australia at risk of a recession? – Monday Finance with Michael Janda

“They are putting through a lot of tightening in a very short amount of time and, if they continue to hike at the rate that they’re doing and just keep going all the way to 3 per cent and even above that level, they’ re not going to be able to actually assess the impact that those hikes are having on the economy in that in that amount of time.

“Now, it’s possible that they end up taking the cash rate to those levels, but I think if they do that, they’ll end up reversing gear in the not too distant future because … we have a highly indebted household sector in Australia and rate rises of that magnitude will just put too many households under stress and I think that will ultimately take the economy backwards.”

The Reserve Bank has recently changed its language slightly to emphasize that “it is not on a pre-set path”.

“The size and timing of future interest rate increases will be guided by the incoming data and the board’s assessment of the outlook for inflation and the labor market,” RBA governor Philip Lowe said after last week’s latest half-a-percentage-point rate rise .

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Categories
Technology

HasanAbi has “given up” his Twitch intellectual property completely

Famous Twitch streamer HasanAbi recently spoke about a phenomenon that shouldn’t be unfamiliar to creative types — people stealing his work and republishing it for monetization purposes.

Oftentimes, especially on digital platforms, creators who publish a completed work (be it art, video, music, and so on) will find it being shared around publicly, and if possible, without watermarks or references to the original creator.

This type of plagiarism is common online, and Hasan is no different from other content creators in that regard.

What does make him different, however, is his stance on the matter: he wants them to monetize his content.

Speaking on-stream, he said “I f*****g ride for all of my fan channels. YouTube took down a bunch of the fan channels including Daily Dose of HasanAbi and stopped monetizing them.”

“I want them to do whatever the f**k they want. I don’t mind their existence, I encourage it. I have basically given up my intellectual property completely.”

The only request he has of these fan channels is that they provide links to his channels, such as his Twitter, Instagram, and Twitch.

HasanAbi is one of the top streamers on Twitch, producing content that is more politics-oriented for average crowds of 30,000 daily.

Primarily focusing on American politics, HasanAbi’s category as a “Just Chatting” streamer marks him as one of the most popular non-video games-related channels on Twitch.

Twitch streamers often will issue take-down requests against channels that use their content without permission — especially if channels began monetizing content that isn’t theirs. HasanAbi is possibly the largest streamer to state publicly that anyone can use his content from him as they wish, as long as they provide links back to his channels from him.

HasanAbi recently began criticizing the uprising of Slots on Twitch, including the grimy practices of major cryptocurrency casinos paying top streamers to stream their gambling habits.

This exposes a large portion of the Twitch population (40% of which are aged 16-24) to gambling and other predatory practices. Crypto gambling is currently illegal in the United States, and Twitch has stated that they are investigating the category for potential regulation.

Written by Junior Miyai on behalf of GLHF.

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Categories
Entertainment

MKR 2022: Nigella Lawson, Manu Feildel ‘heartbroken’ as Alice and Peter serve up ‘inedible’ dessert

Dad and daughter duo Peter and Alice, from Chewton in Victoria, were the first contestants on the new season of MKR to plate up to judges Manu Feildel and Nigella Lawson – and they were understandably excited.

Peter runs a café, Alice works there too, and together they’ve been cooking the dishes they were about to serve up for years and years.

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: MKR duo present disastrous dessert

Watch My Kitchen Rules on Channel 7 and stream it for free on 7plus >>

They were using Alice’s grandma’s tried and tested recipes, guaranteed to please – what could possibly go wrong?

Remove a lot, as it turned out.

As the affable duo welcomed the other contestants into their home, the setting seemed perfect: sweet vintage flourishes on the dining table, a room full of cute collectables and curios, and a homey retro vibe.

This year’s MKR theme is good home cooking, and Peter and Alice had devised a simple but delicious-sounding menu that fits the theme.

They were so warm, hospitable, funny and expressive that you couldn’t help but immediately like them and want them to do well.

Dad and daughter Peter and Alice are the first pair to plate up to Nigella and Manu on MKR. Credit: Seven

Although their entree was not a huge hit with the judges, they were redeemed with an excellent main meal, and then it all fell apart with a disastrous dessert.

“There is nothing on my face but sheer terror,” Alice said as a “poker-faced” Nigella and Manu tasted each of their offerings.

“They don’t give away anything!”

‘lots of pressure’

The entree, Sunday Roast croquettes with Grandma’s relish, failed to impress either judge.

“First to cook tonight,” Manu said. “It’s a big deal, isn’t it?”

“Lot of pressure,” Alice nodded. “Lot of pressure.”

Manu said he didn’t really get the “Sunday roast” feel from the croquette – questioning the dad and daughter’s choice to use braised beef cheeks.

“So, the meat was not roasted, then?” Manu asked.

“When I read roast, I got something different.

“I would have put more spice and seasoning in there as well.

“So I think the idea of ​​it is magical, it’s fantastic, but I think you missed the point.”

Manu gives his verdict. Credit: Seven

Nigella agreed, saying the entree needed more seasoning, something that would make the diner think of Sunday roast stuffing.

The relish also didn’t hit the mark with either Manu or Nigella, with the sweet/sour balance not quite right.

The pair were crestfallen, agreeing that the idea was great, but the execution faltered.

Manu’s pep talk

It took a kitchen pep talk from Manu during the cooking of the main to drag Alice out of her deep funk after their first effort failed to impress the judges.

Manu’s interjection worked, and Alice and Peter then pulled out a stunning main course, parmesan crumbed lamb cutlets with minted peas, silverbeet and salsa verde.

This meal was a hit with both the judges and the other contestants, reinstating their confidence in the kitchen.

It was destined to be smooth sailing from there, right?

Dessert would be a breeze, rounding off the night with a bang after a shaky start.

Wrong!

desert disaster

Peter and Alice decided on one of Grandma’s favorite desserts, a delicious lemon pudding, for the final dish of the night.

But Alice’s grandma used to bake the lemon delicious in a casserole dish; Peter decided to add a retro touch by individually baking each dessert in a vintage teacup.

“It has to be this soft, silky sponge and then this beautiful, rich lemon custard beneath,” Peter explained.

It was meant to be fluffy and spongey beneath the surface, a “step down from a soufflé.”

But when Manu and Nigella tapped into the teacup and through the top layer, there was just a soupy, watery, unappetizing mess below.

The disastrous lemon delicious dessert. Credit: Seven

Peter had underestimated how long each dessert needed to bake for, assuming that the crispy top meant it was cooked all the way through.

What they put on the table was runny, watery, and as one contestant claimed, “inedible.”

Manu told the devastated duo that if he’d been served that dessert in a restaurant, it would have immediately been sent back.

Everyone is gutted for the pair, who had been so welcoming, so nice, and so on-point with the previous plate.

But it was clear that the pressure of being the first team to plate up to Nigella and Manu got to them; their timing was all wrong and they hadn’t presented a cohesive menu.

Nigella Lawson describes the dessert fail as ‘really heartbreaking.’ Credit: Seven

Peter was particularly dejected, saying he’d cooked the lemon delicious hundreds of times, but on the one night where it was really important to get it right, it hadn’t come off.

“This is a pudding I’ve made every week for 30 years,” he said.

“I have to make it once, for 12 people, and it’s a disaster.”

‘Heartbreaking’

Nigella told the pair she was “sorry” the disaster happened on the wrong night, saying the dessert fail was “really heartbreaking.”

“It’s not your fault,” an utterly deflated Alice said.

“No, I know, but I wanted to see you with a smile back on your face,” Nigella replied.

“It was our last chance of redemption,” Alice said later.

“And unfortunately, we just didn’t get it right.”

MKR continues on Channel 7 and 7plus Monday to Wednesday nights at 7.30pm.

For more engaging TV content, visit 7Life on Facebook.

Food dye mishap causes river to run red.

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Categories
Sports

Ricky Stuart to be suspended says Mark Geyer, for Jaeman Salmon comments in Raiders vs Panthers game

Legendary rugby league hardman Mark Geyer has called on the NRL to suspend Ricky Stuart to make an example and set a precedent for the game’s coaches.

The integrity unit is investigating explosive comments made by Stuart during his press conference on Saturday about Penrith playmaker Jaeman Salmon.

The Raiders coach sensationally used his post-game platform to label the 23-year-old a “weak gutted dog person” and said Salmon had been since he was a kid.

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It’s since been revealed Stuart had a run-in with Salmon in 2010 when then the latter was playing under 12s, and the former was coaching the Sharks. The Salmon family and the Panthers are exploring legal options.

NRL coaches have been fined varying amounts for comments made in press conferences before – Stuart the most fined coach ever – but normally the penalty is for questioning the integrity of referees.

A coach has never been suspended, but no coach has ever made such personal remarks as Stuart did about an individual.

Geyer says the game has to draw a line in the sand and send a message to coaches that it is not acceptable.

Stream the NRL premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now

“They are pretty harsh words. This is unprecedented, for mine, I have never seen a press conference like that,” Geyer said on Triple M radio.

“There’s a reason we don’t see it, it’s because you’re not allowed to say what he said.

“There’s stories coming up about what happened 12 years ago in an under 12s game… I get that, I was a coach once myself. But they were 11 years of age.

“I don’t get Ricky Stuart’s side, I really don’t. He’s a 55-year-old male who’s coached over 500 games, he’s been in the game for so long. If that was his son how would he feel, if someone said that about his son?

Freddy ‘in shock’ as Stuart comments

“The NRL have no option, I’m afraid they’ve got no option. There’s a precedent that needs to be set.

“If a coach or a player goes out next weekend… I want them deterred from saying something so bad about a person.

“If that was my son I would be filthy. I would be knocking on (Stuart’s) door the next day, put it that way.

“I think he’s got to be suspended. (Salmon) has been defamed. Everyone saw that, all junior league players saw what Ricky Stuart just said about this kid.”

The NRL is expected to make an announcement on the situation on Monday afternoon, or Tuesday.

Stuart on Sunday acknowledged he should not have used his public press conference to air personal grievances.

The Raiders on Monday issued a statement saying the club will accept any punishment handed down to the coach.

“As a club we do not condone the comments made by Ricky in Saturday night’s press conference and we are currently in dialogue with the NRL and cooperating with all their inquiries,” club chief Don Furner said.

“We will accept their findings and any sanctions they hand down.

“Being a head coach is a high-pressure job and comes with intense scrutiny from fans, media, and public and we understand emotion is high following a match.

“However, as a club we acknowledge that coaches also have a responsibility to ensure they conduct themselves professionally when making public comments.”

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Categories
Australia

Perth real estate: Suburbs where it now costs more than $1m to buy a house

Eleven suburbs have joined the $1m median house price club as values ​​continue to climb in Perth.

While other states are seeing house prices fall, Perth has lagged behind most of the other capitals.

It means despite rising interest rates and cost of living pressures, the housing market in WA has soared in the past year.

Six of the 11 suburbs recorded more than 20 per cent price growth during the 2021-22 financial year, according to the Real Estate Institute of Western Australia.

Marmion, Mount Hawthorn, North Perth, Fremantle and Kensington had their median house prices tip above $1.1m at the end of June.

Gwelup, Booragoon, Karrinyup, Leederville, Iluka and Como reached $1m or more.

The top suburb is Marmion, which now has a median price of $1.27m — an increase of 32 per cent in the past year.

House Price Drop
Camera IconEleven suburbs have joined the $1m median house price club in Perth. Daily Telegraph/Gaye Gerard Credit: News Corp Australia

REIWA president Damian Collins said people had started to gain confidence in WA’s strong economy and property market, which had translated into more sales at the top end.

“All of these suburbs have had medians hovering below $1m for quite some time,” he said.

“It is impressive to see the demand for houses in these suburbs hold strong throughout the 2021-22 financial year, now placing them in Perth’s luxury market.”

Mr Collins said Perth’s premium market was attracting a lot of interest from buyers leading to strong price growth.

“If you are considering selling in one of these suburbs, now would be an opportunistic time to capitalize on this demand,” he said.

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Categories
US

4 people riding in a golf cart killed in crash at Texas intersection

Four people riding in a golf cart were killed — including two juveniles — when a purportedly intoxicated man driving an SUV ran a stop sign at an intersection in southeast Texas, police said.

Miguel Espinoza, 45, has been charged with four counts of intoxication manslaughter in the crash about 11:30 pm Saturday in Galveston, about 50 miles southeast of Houston, police said.

Espinoza was being held in Galveston County Jail on Sunday on a $400,000 bond, police said. Jail records did not list an attorney for him.

Galveston Police Sgt. Derek Gaspard said that after the SUV failed to stop, it struck a pickup, which then crashed into the golf cart that had six people aboard. He said the golf cart and pickup were traveling in opposite directions through the intersection on a street that did not have a stop sign.

Police said the adult driver of the golf cart was pronounced dead at the scene while a woman and two juveniles on the golf cart were taken to a hospital, where they died. The two other passengers — an adult and a juvenile — were hospitalized Sunday in critical condition, police said.

Espinoza, who lives in the Houston-area city of Rosenberg, and his passenger had minor injuries, police said. They were taken to the hospital and later released.

The occupants of the pickup were not injured, Gaspard said.

Names and ages of the dead weren’t immediately released.

Gaspard said he believes the golf cart, which was rented, was operating legally on the city street. He said members of two families were riding on the golf cart at the time of the crash.

Galveston Mayor Craig Brown said golf carts have become “quite a prolific mode of transportation” for residents and visitors to the island resort area, which is located on the Gulf of Mexico.

Brown said the city has in the past put in place ordinances to make operating golf carts safer, and will consider additional ordinances at an upcoming City Council meeting.

“I was out last night,” Brown said. “The island was busy and there were golf carts — residential as well as rental golf carts — out all over these streets.”

Categories
Business

Winemakers embrace corks again thanks to sustainability push

In news that will strike fear into the heart of anyone who has struggled with a corkscrew, the traditional wine closure — cork — is making a comeback.

While screw caps have dominated the Australian wine industry for decades, a new generation of winemakers is going old school.

Noah Ward is a brand ambassador at Unico Zelo, which produces wines in South Australia’s Adelaide Hills.

He said making wine more sustainable was behind the push to put corks back into bottles.

“You can’t grow a screw cap. It’s a finite resource that you have to mine … but you can grow cork trees til the cows come home,” Mr Ward said.

“There’s also that little plastic polymer that’s not necessarily good for the planet [because it] won’t biodegrade very well.”

Mr Ward said in addition to its environmental benefits, corks also helped wines develop more naturally.

A man pours a glass of red wine at a dimly lit wooden bar, an orange wine is in the foreground.
Unico Zelo brand ambassador Noah Ward says he knows of about 50 winemakers of his generation who were using cork.(Supplied: Unico Zelo)

“Our business started in the 2010s, which was a pretty big shift in the wine industry with the emergence of natural wine or lo-fi wine, minimal intervention, wine. Most of the producers of that ilk were using corks or other products like that ,” he said.

“There are things that screw caps can do better than corks, they can keep wine protected from oxygen for a long period of time, so they can age a lot longer.

“But I like to see a wine develop quicker, so I can actually drink it [sooner rather] than wait 25 years for my semillon to finally get to that point where it’s not extremely high in acid.”

Why did corks fall out of fashion?

General manager Dan Simmons of Australian cork manufacturer Vinocor said the change came about because of a chemical called trichloroanisole or TCA.

“The term is ‘corked’,” he said.

“TCA can make the wine smell like wet cardboard—it basically ruins the wine.

“Back in the 90s, around 5 per cent of wines were being tainted by this chemical compound.”

In response to this, Mr Simmons said Australian wine producers started shifting to screw caps in the early 2000s.

“The cork industry went from supplying nearly all of the market to a position where probably only 10 per cent of the market was filled with cork,” he said.

Then in 2004 Diam created a solution.

“They took some technology that was used by the coffee industry to remove caffeine from coffee beans and adapted that to the cork industry to remove TCA and other flavour-modifying molecules,” Mr Simmons said.

“It also solved the other problem of bottle variation because the Diam cork is actually granulated cork, and then it’s put back together. So they’re very consistent as it removed the problem of random oxidisation.”

But the local industry had moved on.

Three corks on a white background.
The Diam cork is made from granulated offcuts, pieced together with a carbon-based glue.(Supplied: Vinocor)

Mr Simmons said while cork was experiencing a resurgence, making up about 15 per cent of closures of Australian wines, more companies needed to use it to make recycling programs effective.

“The secondary uses are immense,” he said.

“[Cork is in] the soles of shoes, in building products, and sporting goods such as the inside of cricket balls.”

Mr Simmons said Vinocor hoped to work with competitors to encourage the use of corks more widely.

“Sustainability is very important for the wine industry. We’re signatories to the Australian packaging covenant, so we need to find ways to make sure that our packaging products are recyclable or compostable,” he said.

“Certainly in other markets around the world, like in America and in Europe, collecting corks for recycling is just normal practice because they have the critical mass.”

A wine bottle with a cork and glasses on the back of a white ute
Unico Zelo lists packaging materials, such as corks and palettes, in online marketplaces or donates them to local kindergartens.(Supplied: Unico Zelo)

not corkscrew? No problem

Mr Ward said once consumers understood the benefits of cork, they were on board.

But ensuring they had the tools to open wines with this closure had been a challenge.

Last year Unico Zelo even ran a “sabre off” competition calling for customers to share videos on social media of them cutting open wine bottles.

A glass of white wine next to a cork on a corkscrew
The raw material of cork is taken from a cork oak, with the tree able to be harvested up to 15 times during its life.(Supplied: Vinocor)

“One of my favorite things in the world is trying to MacGyver open a bottle of wine,” Mr Ward said.

“You can even open wine with a shoe, I’ve done that a few times before, you can get tricky with drills… you can even use a spatula.”

“But I think now it’s becoming one of those things where if you’re into wine and you start buying stuff from interesting small producers you’re going to have to spend 10 bucks to buy a corkscrew.”

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Categories
Technology

We’re back traveling and you can charge faster and easier with the OneWorld Adapter

Australians are back traveling overseas after a two-year hiatus during the COVID pandemic and now there’s an even easier way to charge your devices no matter where you are in the world with the OneWorld 65 International Adapter.

Not only will the OneWorld 65 International Adapter connect to power points in more than 200 countries it can also charge six devices at the same time.

It does this thanks to GaN (Gallium Nitride) which transfers current more efficiently and generates less heat, so more power goes towards the charge.

There’s also a 65W USB-C PD (power delivery) charging port for fast charging smartphones and tablets and even charging a MacBook without the need for an external power brick.

Also onboard is a 20W USB-C PD along with three smart USB ports.

The OneWorld 65 – International Adapter with 65W PD Charger (PA-ONE-65W) is available now and is priced at $99.35 from oneadaptr.com.

SPECIFICATIONS

– GaN (Gallium Nitride) Technology

– 1 x 65W USB PD charging port with QC

– 1 x 20W USB PD charging port with QC

– 1 x USB C Smart charging port

– 2 x USB A Smart charging port

– 10A AC universal power outlet

– Works in over 200+ countries

– Charge up to 6 devices simultaneously

– Input: 100-240V

– Output (USB-C PD): 65W max, 5V3a, 9V3a, 12V1.5a, 20V 3A

– Output (USB-C PD): 20W max. 5V3a, 9V3a, 12V1.5a

– Output (Smart USB): 5V3.0a

– Output (AC): 100-240V @ 7A max.

DIMENSIONS & WEIGHTS

Dimensions: W 54.5 x L 69.0 x H 67.0 mm / W 2.15 x L 2.72 x H 2.64 inch

Weight: 178.2g / 6.29oz

Categories
Entertainment

Princess Mary and Prince Frederik confirm Prince Christian and Princess Isabella will go to new schools after Herlufsholm bullying scandal | Danish royal family

Crown Princess Mary and Crown Prince Frederick of Denmark have announced they’re sending their two eldest children to new schools in the wake of a damaging bullying scandal.

The Danish royal household issued a statement on Sunday confirming Prince Christian, 16, and Princess Isabella, 15, will start at separate schools this week.

The decision was made after “the Crown Prince’s family’s deliberations during the summer”, the palace said.

READMORE: Fergie’s mansion purchase leaves villa owner ‘outraged’

Prince Christian with Crown Prince Frederik and Crown Princess Mary outside Herlufsholm School in August, 2021. (Keld Navntoft, Kongehuset)

The family has recently returned to Copenhagen after their summer break at Gråsten Palace.

Prince Christian, who is heir to the Danish throne after his father, will start at the Ordrup Gymnasium (Ordrup High School) in Gentofte, north of Copenhagen.

Princess Isabella will start at Ingrid Jespersens Gymnasieskole (Ingrid Jespersen’s High School) in Copenhagen.

Last month, Princess Mary and Prince Frederik pulled Prince Christian out of the Herlufsholm Boarding School after claims of bullying were brought to light.

They also confirmed Princess Isabella would not be attending the prestigious school as planned.

Princess Isabella of Denmark pictured for her 15th birthday on April 21, 2022. (Hasse Nielsen)

The Crown Prince couple issued a statement saying they would decide on new schools for their children after allegations emerged of a violent culture filled with abuse and bullying at Herlufsholm.

Students have also accused the school and its staff of covering up their stories of abuse.

“The question about our son Christian’s and our daughter Isabella’s choice of school has been very important for us, and the unfortunate matter has brought many and strong opinions into play in the public,” Crown Prince Frederik and Crown Princess Mary said in a joint statement on June 25.

READMORE: Princess Mary condemns bullying claims at son’s school

“That is completely understandable when it deals with the well-being of children and young people. At the same time, it has been important to stand by our basic idea that major decisions must be made on an informed basis. We now have that basis.” .”

Crown Princess Mary and her family at Graasten Castle in Denmark in July, 2022. (Instagram/The Danish Royal Household)

Their message came after the release of a preliminary decision from Denmark’s National Agency for Education and Quality that “directs a particularly harsh critique” of Herlufsholm.

“It has been a difficult process for us as a family, but, based on the overall picture and our special position as Crown Prince Couple, we have chosen that Prince Christian will stop at Herlufsholm and that Princess Isabella will not start in ninth class at the school after the summer holiday.

“With thoughts about the many students who will continue at Herlufsholm, it is our hope that the school now gets more peace to ensure the necessary changes and succeeds in creating a culture in which all thrive and feel safe.”

In May, at documentary on TV2 included claims from a student who described being sexually abused by another, another student spoke of corporal punishment and a third described being assaulted during a party at the school.

Crown Princess Mary and her family at Fredensborg Palace for the confirmation of Princess Isabella on April 30, 2022. (Getty)

In November last year, four students were expelled after being accused of taking part in the abuse and filming a number of incidents.

Some students have claimed staff turned a blind eye to their claims.

When the allegations came to light, Princess Mary and her husband issued a swift response expressing their shock and disappointment.

READMORE: Crown Princess Mary on the moment her ‘entire life changed’

“As parents of a child who goes to Herlufsholm, we are deeply shaken by the testimonies that have emerged in the current documentary about the school,” the Crown Prince couple said on May 4.

“It is heart-breaking to hear about systematic bullying and about the culture of abuse and violence that many have been a part of.

Prince Christian at his new school, Herlufsholm, in August, 2021. (Keld Navntoft, Kongehuset)

“That is completely unacceptable. As parents, we expect the school to effectively ensure a culture where everyone is safe and part of the community, and we will in the coming time follow the changes that are obviously necessary.”

Prince Christian16, is not connected to the allegations in any way.

In August, 2021, he posed with his mum and dad at Herlufsholm as he began his time at the boarding school.

Herlufsholm was founded in 1565 for Danish nobility and is located 80km outside of Copenhagen in Næstved.

Prince Christian was the first future king to attend the school, although several of his alumni are artists and politicians, including two former prime ministers.

The Crown Prince family inside their home, Frederik VIII’s Palace at Amalienborg in Copenhagen. (Hassen Nielsen)

Christian’s cousin Prince Nikolai, who is the eldest son of Prince Joachimis a former student of Herlufsholm and graduated in 2018.

The Danish royal household announced that Prince Christian would start at the school in August last year having finished his education at Tranegårdskolen in Gentofte.

Christian had been at that school from grade one to grade nine.

Around 600 students are enrolled at the school with approximately 275 living on campus.

They follow a 10-day program with lessons on Saturdays followed by a three-day weekend.

The allegations about Herlufsholm follow earlier claims about tough disciplinary practices at the institution.

Herlufsholm School responded to the documentary’s claims in a statement issued on May 3.

The school’s rector Mikkel Kjellberg said many of the allegations contained within the television program were “very old cases have been used from another time – where the culture at Herlufsholm was different”.

He said the bullying and violence were “not part of the culture at Herlufsholm”.

Crown Princess Mary and her family begin summer holiday

Categories
Sports

NRL star Bryce Cartwright subject of restraining order to protect anti-vaxxer ex-wife Shanelle

NRL star Bryce Cartwright is hit with restraining order on behalf of his anti-vaxxer ex-wife – after the couple split up

  • Bryce Cartwright and his ex-wife Shanelle split in early 2021 after difficult 2020
  • NRL star and his ex-partner are anti-vaxxers, stating it is their personal choice
  • Cartwright refused mandatory influenza vaccination during 2020 NRL season
  • Walked away from $450,000 contract on Gold Coast to link up with Parramatta
  • Police have now taken out an AVO against the footballer on behalf of his ex-wife
  • Do you know more? Email [email protected]

NRL star Bryce Cartwright will front a Sydney court this week after police took out a restraining order to protect his anti-vaxxer ex-wife.

Cartwright split from his former wife Shanelle early last year, just months after walking away from a $450,000-a-season contract with the Gold Coast Titans.

The 27-year-old forward returned to New South Wales in September 2020 with Shanelle, the mother of his two children, citing personal reasons. He now plays for the Parramatta Eels.

Police have sought an apprehended violence order against Cartwright on behalf of Shanelle and the footballer is due to appear in Waverley Local Court on Thursday.

NRL star Bryce Cartwright will front a Sydney court this week after police took out a restraining order to protect his anti-vaxxer ex-wife Shanelle.  The former couple is pictured

NRL star Bryce Cartwright will front a Sydney court this week after police took out a restraining order to protect his anti-vaxxer ex-wife Shanelle. The former couple is pictured

Cartwright split from wife Shanelle early last year, just months after walking away from a $450,000-a-season contract with the Gold Coast Titans.  The former couple have two children

Cartwright split from wife Shanelle early last year, just months after walking away from a $450,000-a-season contract with the Gold Coast Titans. The former couple have two children

An interim order states that Cartwright must not assault, threaten, stalk, harass or intimidate his former partner as well as other standard conditions he does not damage her property or harm any animal she owns.

Cartwright is not facing any criminal charges.

An incident which led to the AVO being sought was described by sources as a ‘domestic dispute’ which was in no physical way, according to The Daily Telegraph.

The former couple’s beliefs about vaccinations, expressed mostly on social media, were widely condemned by medical experts in 2020.

At the time of their split, Cartwright’s agent Allan Gainey of Pinnacle Sports Management said the split was a ‘personal matter’.

‘Look, the kid is in a good spot at the moment and I want to keep him in that spot,’ Gainey said in January last year. ‘He does n’t need any publicity surrounding his personal life.’

Police have sought an apprehended violence order against Cartwright on behalf of Shanelle and the footballer is due to appear in Waverley Local Court on Thursday.  The couple relocated to Sydney in September 2020 citing 'personal reasons'

Police have sought an apprehended violence order against Cartwright on behalf of Shanelle and the footballer is due to appear in Waverley Local Court on Thursday. The couple relocated to Sydney in September 2020 citing ‘personal reasons’

Concerns for Cartwright’s mental state began after he and Shanelle were sent a number of threats on social media due to their controversial stance on vaccinations.

Some of the threats involved harming the couple’s young children.

‘At some point it does take a toll,’ Cartwright said at the time. ‘I speak to a counselor every now and then just to clear my mind.

‘I have little things I like to do, like meditation… it clears my head and can be as simple as just going for a swim, staying off my phone or taking the kids to the beach.’

Shanelle (pictured) and Bryce Cartwright were outspoken about their views on vaccinations

Shanelle (pictured) and Bryce Cartwright were outspoken about their views on vaccinations

Cartwright, a standout Penrith junior before making his first grade debut in 2014, was granted permission to continue playing in the NRL in May 2020 despite refusing a mandatory influenza vaccination.

That vaccination was part of the NRL’s return-to-play regulations at the height of the Covid pandemic.

The Titans submitted an application for a medical exemption which was granted by Queensland’s chief medical officer Jeannette Young.

Cartwright and his wife sparked then controversy when they publicly declared they would not vaccinate their young children.

Cartwright (pictured above) walked away from a big contract with the Gold Coast before signing with Parramatta

Cartwright (pictured above) walked away from a big contract with the Gold Coast before signing with Parramatta

The couple called themselves ‘pro-choice’ rather than ‘anti-vax’.

Once touted as a NSW State of Origin prospect following a strong start to his career with the Panthers, Cartwright made the move to the Titans to work under ex-coach Garth Brennan in 2018.

He played just three games for Gold Coast in 2020 before linking with Parramatta, where he made 19 appearances last year.

Cartwright has turned out for the Eels seven times this year, including coming off the bench in a 36-20 win over Manly on Friday night.

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