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Entertainment

Banksy painting found in Tel Aviv, 70 kilometers from its original location in West Bank

A long-lost painting by British graffiti artist Banksy has been resurfaced in an art gallery in downtown Tel Aviv, an hour’s drive and a world away from the concrete wall in the occupied West Bank where it was initially sprayed.

The relocation of the painting, which depicts a slingshot-toting rat and was likely intended to protest Israel’s occupation of the area, raises ethical questions about the removal of artwork from occupied territory.

The painting initially appeared near Israel’s separation barrier in the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem and was one of several works created in secret around 2007.

Banksy’s trademark absurdist and dystopian imagery was used to protest Israel’s decades-long occupation of territories the Palestinians want for a future state.

It now resides at the Urban Gallery in the heart of Tel Aviv’s financial district, surrounded by glass and steel skyscrapers.

Israeli art dealer Koby Abergel, who bought the painting, said the gallery was simply displaying the work and leaving its interpretation to others.

“We brought it to the main street of Tel Aviv to be shown to the audience and to show his messages,” he said.

Mr Abergel said the cracks and scrapes in the concrete served as “a fingerprint” that proved it was the same piece that appeared on the artist’s website.

He said he bought the concrete slab from a Palestinian associate in Bethlehem, but declined to disclose how much he paid for it.

The 70-kilometre journey it made from the West Bank to Tel Aviv is shrouded in secrecy.

The concrete slab, which weighs about 400 kilograms, would have had to pass through Israel’s serpentine barrier and at least one military checkpoint.

The graffiti artwork was spray-painted on a concrete block that was part of an abandoned Israeli army position in Bethlehem, next to a soaring concrete section of the separation barrier.

Sometime later, the painting was itself subjected to graffiti by someone who obscured the painting and scrawled “RIP Bansky Rat” on the block.

Mr Abergel said Palestinian residents cut out the painting and kept it in private residences until earlier this year.

banksy graffiti
Banksy’s work depicts a slingshot-toting rat and was likely intended to protest Israel’s occupation of the West Bank.(AP Photo: Oded Balilty)

He said relocating the work involved delicate negotiations with his Palestinian associate and careful restoration to remove the acrylic paint sprayed over Banksy’s work.

The massive block was then enclosed in a steel frame so it could be lifted onto a flatbed truck and rolled through a checkpoint, until it arrived in Tel Aviv in the middle of the night.

It was not possible to independently confirm his account of his journey.

Israel controls all access to the West Bank, and Palestinians require Israeli permits to travel in or out and to import and export goods.

Even when traveling within the West Bank, they can be stopped and searched by Israeli soldiers at any time.

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Categories
Australia

Maribyrnong City Council to remove 12 trees from Bunbury Street, angering residents

A dozen heritage-listed trees in Footscray have been marked for removal by Maribyrnong City Council (MCC) after reports they posed a risk to public safety.

Some 54 English elm and desert ash line Bunbury Street in the Melbourne suburb, with the eldest trees planted about 120 years ago.

But residents believed MCC was unnecessarily removing some trees and were only informed about the plans days before work was expected to start.

Local Footscray Ronch Willner said the move had sparked anger.

“Last week they sent notifications to a few residents about the removal works that have started today,” he said.

“Because of the poor community consultation, the community has started to read the reports and have started to [realise] … they’ve been selectively removing the trees over the years without notifying the residents.”

A street with cars parked on either side and large leafy green trees in the nature strip.
Residents say they want to see the heritage-listed trees remain.(Supplied: Martin Stockfeld)

Mr Willner said the community, which wanted its green spaces preserved, understood the safety risks the trees could pose.

But he said the community felt MCC was unnecessarily removing some of the trees.

Mr Willner said a juvenile tree (number 51) that was flagged in the arborist reports as “needing watering” was removed by the council without notice.

A report from the MCC flagged the decline in the trees’ health was in part due to infrastructure and management of the canopies, and stated three trees had already been removed.

Many trees, according to the report, would also need to be removed in the future as they continued to grow, with their roots possibly becoming damaged by the kerbside.

A screenshot of a report showing to photos of trees growing into the gutter of a street.
Some trees may be removed because they are growing too close to the kerb.(Supplied: Maribyrnong City Council)

Trees ‘could not be saved’

MCC chief executive officer Celia Haddock said the trees were putting the street’s residents and visitors at risk and “could not be saved.”

“Two mature elms collapsed during a severe wind event last year,” she said.

“Their failure prompted MCC to proactively assess and remove only those identified as being in poor structural condition to mitigate any future risk to the public.”

Plans to replace the trees have not been confirmed, but Ms Haddock said the council would be “working with local residents on a tree-planting renewal plan”.

Community members have since started an online petition in the hope MCC will rethink the trees’ removal.

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Categories
US

DeSantis suspends elected Democratic prosecutor who signed pledge on abortion cases

Comment

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) suspended the Tampa Bay area’s top state prosecutor Thursday after he vowed not to prosecute potential crimes related to abortion restrictions or gender-affirming care for minors.

Legal experts described the decision to suspend Hillsborough County State Attorney Andrew Warren (D) as alarming because it appears to be punishing an elected official exercising prosecutorial discretion on issues the governor disagrees with.

“It’s shocking and disturbing behavior,” said University of Miami law professor Tamara Lave. “[Warren is] a democratically elected official put in that office by voters. They elected him twice. If his constituents do not like what he was doing, they have the ability to vote him out of office.

Warren was first elected in 2016, and reelected in 2020. He signed a pledge in June with dozens of other prosecutors from around the country that said they would “refrain from using limited criminal legal system resources to criminalize personal medical decisions.”

Warren signed a similar pledge in 2021 that stated prosecutors would “use our discretion and not promote the criminalization of gender-affirming healthcare or transgender people.”

DeSantis signed into law this year a ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy with no exceptions for rape or incest. A lawsuit claiming the ban violates the right to privacy in the Florida constitution is being heard on appeal.

While there currently is no ban in the state on gender-affirming surgery, DeSantis said Warren shouldn’t preemptively say he would not prosecute if a law is passed.

DeSantis, surrounded by law enforcement officers at a news conference at the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office in Tampa on Thursday, said Warren was trying to “nullify” state laws.

“This prosecutor, this state attorney for this judicial circuit, Andrew Warren, has put himself publicly above the law,” DeSantis said.

DeSantis said Warren had a “very, very troublesome record.”

Warren has taken other actions that DeSantis criticized, including declining to prosecute 67 protesters arrested for unlawful assembly during the demonstrations over the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police in 2020.

Warren was also instrumental in helping formerly incarcerated people regain their voting rights after DeSantis signed into law restrictions to a voter-approved constitutional amendment allowing them to register to vote.

Warren also created a conviction review office to examine innocence claims. During a news conference that had been scheduled Thursday before DeSantis suspended him, Warren announced the success of one of those cases. After leading an investigation that in 2020 freed a man wrongly convicted of murder, Warren’s staff continued to pursue the case, and on Thursday he announced that an examination of DNA linked two other men, currently in prison, to that murder, as well as other murders in the area in 1983.

Linda Sheffield, a niece of Linda Lansen, one of the victims, appeared alongside Warren and thanked him for getting justice for her family after four decades.

“I keep saying thank you to him, and he keeps saying no. But it’s true, we need this. We need this here,” Sheffield said. “We also need it all over the state.”

Warren was asked at the news conference what he was doing when he learned that DeSantis had suspended him.

“I was doing the work that I was elected to do as a state attorney,” Warren said. “I was focused on delivering justice to Linda and her family de ella that they’ve been waiting 39 years to get… and I was overseeing the office of 300 people that keeps 1.5 million people safe in Hillsborough County. So the governor wants to do his side show with his cronies of him, I’m the one who’s upholding the law and keeping the community safe. ”

In his order suspending Warren, DeSantis said the prosecutor “demonstrated his incompetence and willful defiance of his duties” when he signed the pledge to “use our discretion and not promote the criminalization of gender-affirming healthcare or transgender people.”

DeSantis supporters in the GOP-led Florida legislature applauded the governor’s move. Incoming state House speaker Paul Renner tweeted that state attorneys “don’t get to choose which laws you uphold … that’s the California way.”

Rep. Fentrice Driskell, leader of the Florida House Democrats, called the suspension “a mean-spirited political stunt.” Driskell, who is from Tampa, said Warren has done a good job as a state attorney.

“Andrew Warren’s statements are well within his prosecutorial discretion,” Driskell said. “I don’t believe the governor has authority to remove him just because of decisions he doesn’t agree with. Voters put Andrew Warren in office. We have a governor who doesn’t respect representative democracy.”

Warren said at the Thursday afternoon news conference that he still considered himself to be the state attorney for the 13th Judicial Circuit, and that he hadn’t read DeSantis’s order suspending him.

“And just based on the governor’s track record with unconstitutional orders, I have a feeling that this is going to be just as unconstitutional as the 15-week ban on abortion, the anti-protest law and [a] dozen other things,” Warren said. “The governor is trying to overthrow the results of a fair and free election. … This is the governor trying to overthrow democracy here in Hillsborough County.”

Categories
Business

2023 Nissan Z arrives in Australia

The first Nissan ‘Zed’ car in more than a decade has arrived in Australia, ahead of the start of customer deliveries in the coming weeks.


The new 2023 Nissan Z has arrived in Australia ahead of the first customer deliveries in the coming weeks.

Revealed 12 months ago, the simply-named ‘Z’ is the first new Nissan ‘Zed’ car since the 370Z went on sale in 2008, offering a refreshed retro-styled look, standard twin-turbo V6, and a modern twin-screen inside.

Priced from $73,300 plus on-road costs, it’s also about $20,000 more expensive than the car it replaces – with a limited-edition Proto Spec pushing the price to $80,700 plus on-road costs.



While customer deliveries are yet to begin, Nissan Australia is celebrating the arrival of its first new Zs with a step back through the ‘Z car’ lineage, which celebrated its 50th birthday in 2019.

A gallery of images published by Nissan Australia today shows six of the seven Z-car generations built since 1969:



  • Two examples of the original ‘S30’ generation: an original 1969 Datsun 240Z, and a 1974 Datsun 260Z
  • 1978 Nissan 280ZX, designated S130
  • 1989 Nissan 300ZX (the second-generation 300ZX, badged Z32)
  • 2002 Nissan 350Z (Z33)
  • 2008 Nissan 370Z (Z34)
  • 2023 Nissan Z

Missing from the set is the first-generation 300ZX (the Z31), sold in the mid 1980s.

While not publicized at launch, in a fun fact for Nissan Z fans: official Japanese data lists the new Z as wearing the RZ34 designation, rather than the long-rumoured Z35 codename, as it’s not an all-new car – but rather a reskin of the old 370Z, with a similar floorpan and identical wheelbase.

For a deep dive into all past Nissan Z-car generations, click here to read Drive’s history feature, published in late 2020.



“This is a proud moment. Few models can claim the performance lineage of the Z, and to be able to celebrate it right here in Australia, on the eve of a new dawn of performance for the brand, is special,” Nissan Australia Managing Director, Adam Paterson, said in in the middle statement.

“This might be the first example of the all-new Z we see on local roads, but we’ll soon be seeing many more, with a new era of Z about to begin.”

the 2023 Nissan Z is due in Australian showrooms in the coming weeks.



alex misoyannis

Alex Misoyannis has been writing about cars since 2017, when he started his own website, Redline. He contributed for Drive in 2018, before joining CarAdvice in 2019, becoming a regular contributing journalist within the news team in 2020. Cars have played a central role throughout Alex’s life, from flicking through car magazines as a young age, to growing up around performance vehicles in a car-loving family.

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Categories
Entertainment

Victoria Beckham ‘can’t stand’ Brooklyn’s wife Nicola Peltz

There’s a full-on cold war between Victoria Beckham and her new daughter-in-law, Nicola Peltz, Page Six has learned.

Peltz, 27, just married Brooklyn Beckham, 23 – Victoria’s oldest son with soccer superstar David Beckham – back in April. But we hear trouble was brewing even before the nuptials.

“They can’t stand each other and don’t talk,” a source close to the family told us. “The build-up to the wedding was horrendous.”

The source says that Peltz – who is the actress daughter of New York billionaire Nelson Peltz – didn’t want her soon-to-be-mother-in-law “to be any part of the planning, and she wouldn’t clue Victoria in on anything. Communication was minimal.”

Apparently, the cold shoulder didn’t help Posh Spice, 48 – who was struggling to warm up to the new member of the family as it was – see Peltz’s good side.

They added that it’s become “non-stop petty drama,” and it’s coming between the Beckhams, who now live in Miami, and their model son.

“They haven’t spoken to him much in the last few months,” said a source, who told us that it even went over badly at Chez Becks when Brooklyn posted a cover of British magazine Tatler that called Peltz “The New Mrs Beckham” .

The sources suspect that Peltz may be suffering from a little jealousy about her man’s globally renowned mum, and isn’t thrilled with the attention she gets, especially around her wedding day.

Peltz and Victoria Beckham were contacted for comment.

This story was originally published by Page Six and has been reproduced with permission

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Categories
Sports

McDonald in to face Kangaroos

Round 21 – North Melbourne v Sydney Swans
Sunday, August 7, 2022
First Bounce: 1:10 p.m.
Marvel Stadium

OUTS: Joel Amartey (omitted), Josh Kennedy (medi-sub)
INS: logan mcdonald

The Sydney Swans face North Melbourne at Marvel Stadium in Round 21 on Sunday, August 7 with Logan McDonald named to return for the first time since Round 16.

Following last week’s 73-point victory over the GIANTS, McDonald comes into the line up while Joel Amartey (omitted) and Josh Kennedy (medi-sub) are omissions this week.

“He has gone back for a weeks and has been working hard. As we always knew, he goes about it with the right attitude and comes back into the senior team with another opportunity which is great to see,” said senior coach John Longmire of McDonald’s return.

“We know there are some players playing well in our VFL team and that it is important to keep going but our senior team has been striving for that consistency all season, and we are still striving for that so it’s another opportunity this Sunday against the Kangaroos.

Longmire said he had been impressed by the side’s constant desire to improve and focus on the next challenge.

“The fact is we are always looking forward to our next challenge all the time, whether it is the next quarter or the next game,” Longmire said.

“The ability to recognize what we do well, things we can improve upon and move onto the next challenge and that has been the same again this week.

“The stoppage game of the Kangaroos is very high so we have to make sure we are on top of that,” Longmire added.

“When we are playing well, it’s everyone contributing and a weight of numbers performance so we after that again this week across the whole playing group.”

The match against the Kangaroos will be broadcast live nationally on Fox Footy and Kayo, and on 7mate in NSW and the ACT.

Get all the important information in our Match Day Hub ahead of Round 21

ROUND 21 – North Melbourne v Sydney Swans, Marvel Stadium – Sunday, August 7, 2022.

backs Paddy McCartin Dane Rampe Tom McCartin
Half Backs Jake Lloyd Robert Fox Ollie Florent
Centerline Justin McInerney Callum Mills Dylan Stephens
Half Forwards Will Hayward Sam Reid errol gulden
forwards Tom Papley lance franklin isaac heeney
followers Tom Hickey chad warner Luke Parker
Exchange Nick Blakey Ryan Clarke James Rowbottom
logan mcdonald
Emergency Peter Ladhams matt roberts ben ronke
Josh Kennedy

Categories
Australia

Anthony Albanese lashes out at Sussan Ley’s ‘totally hypocritical’ claims after the Coalition were ‘disruptive’ in Parliament

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has defended claims made against him over a “dismissive gesture” towards Deputy Opposition Leader Sussan Ley.

Ms Ley called out Mr Albanese for his “hypocrisy” in Parliament following the Prime Minister’s dismissive hand motion made towards her during a typical heated Question Time on Thursday afternoon.

Mr Albanese spoke with ABC Melbourne on Friday where he brushed off the suggestions and claimed the Opposition was itself being “completely disruptive” towards him.

“I dismiss the comments as being totally hypocritical given the yelling that occurred every time I was on my feet, including non-stop gestures, yelling for me to sit down,” he said.

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“People who ask questions should expect to hear the answer.

“The Coalition had a bad day yesterday. They continue to be completely disruptive during Question Time.”

Paul Fletcher, Manager of Opposition Business, stepped up to the dispatch box shortly after Ms Ley and demanded Mr Albanese “withdraw”.

“The Prime Minister made a dismissive gesture towards the Deputy Leader of the Opposition,” he said on Thursday.

“It was disrespectful to a sitting woman parliamentarian and (I) asked him to withdraw.”

Mr Albanese was pressed further by the ABC host on the incident where he declared, “I have been respectful and I’ll continue to be”.

“We engage respectfully across the Parliament, in order to get the legislation through including with independents and crossbench members,” he said.

“The Opposition have chosen the road of disruption. That is what they’re engaged in.

“The Opposition counted themselves out of the debate on climate change when Peter Dutton, for reasons beyond my comprehension, ignored the mandate and ignored the message that the Australian people gave that they wanted action on climate change.”

Ms Ley was questioned earlier on Friday by Sky News Australia host Peter Stefanovic about what happened where she unleased on the Prime Minister.

“I can take the rough and tumble, every woman in this place knows how to do that,” she said.

“What I can’t accept is the hypocrisy.

“Anthony Albanese said it was going to be a family-friendly parliament.”

The Albanese Government is celebrating a win after its Climate Change Bill passed the lower house, but Opposition Leader Peter Dutton warned Labor’s focus away from cost-of-living proved it would take Australia down “very dangerous path”.

The legislation will enshrine the government’s 2030 and 2050 emissions reduction targets into law and received support from a majority of the crossbench and Bridget Archer – the only Liberal member who crossed the floor.

But the Liberal Party remained staunchly opposed to the legislation which would prevent a future government ratcheting down the 43 per cent 2030 target.

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Categories
US

Key US Senator Sinema agrees to $430 billion drug, energy bill

WASHINGTON, Aug 4 (Reuters) – Democratic US Senator Kyrsten Sinema said on Thursday she agreed to “move forward” on a $430 billion drug pricing, energy and tax bill, subject to a Senate arbitrator’s approval of the bill, which Democrats intend to pass over Republican objections.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said earlier on Thursday the chamber would convene on Saturday to vote on a motion to proceed and then begin debate on the bill.

The bill known as the Inflation Reduction Act, introduced last week by Schumer and Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, is a key priority for Democrats and President Joe Biden ahead of November’s election battle for control of the US Congress.

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The act will help people save money on prescription drugs and health premiums, Biden said in a statement on Thursday.

“It will make our tax system more fair by making corporations pay a minimum tax,” he said.

With the 100-seat Senate split 50-50, Democrats plan to pass the bill without Republican support through a parliamentary process known as reconciliation.

But they cannot afford to lose support from a single lawmaker. Sinema’s agreement was a critical breakthrough. Another worry is COVID-19 – senators can only vote in person, so Schumer will need his full caucus to be present and healthy to pass the measure if Republicans remain unified in opposition.

Sinema said she had reached an agreement with other Democrats to remove a provision that would impose new taxes on carried interest. Without the provision, private equity and hedge fund financiers can continue to pay the lower capital gains tax rate on much of their income, instead of the higher income tax rate paid by wage-earners.

She cautioned that her agreement to “move forward” was subject to the review of the Senate parliamentarian. The parliamentarian has to approve the contents of the bill to allow it to move forward through the “reconciliation” process that Democrats plan to use to bypass the chamber’s normal rules requiring 60 Senators to agree to advance most legislation.

Schumer, in a statement, said, he believed he now had the votes to pass the bill.

“The agreement preserves the major components of the Inflation Reduction Act, including reducing prescription drug costs, fighting climate change, closing tax loopholes exploited by big corporations and the wealthy, and reducing the deficit by $300 billion,” Schumer said.

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Reporting by Scott Malone, Additional reporting by Shivani Tanna in Bengaluru; Editing by Daniel Wallis, Shri Navaratnam and Tom Hogue

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Categories
Business

Jack Dorsey stands by Afterpay deal despite BNPL bloodbath

In the earnings call, Block said Afterpay’s loan losses had improved slightly, though competition was intense, and it remained closely focused on managing the risk of bad debts in a weakening economy.

Block shares were down 5.5 per cent to $119.10 on the ASX after the company’s total transactions were weaker than expected.

Dorsey’s planned creation of a financial “super app” – a term sometimes used to describe China’s WeChat Pay – is designed to allow it to offer customers a number of products through a single offering.

“It really has to do with how much utility we’re offering, so we’re not just focused on one thing such as peer-to-peer transaction, or investing, or bitcoin, or lending, but it is a place, one place you can do all those things,” Dorsey said.

“We see peers in other industries in other spaces, and other countries that have done that very well, which are sometimes referenced as super-apps or neo-banks. We believe that over the long term, that is the right strategy.“

While Block’s initial takeover of Afterpay was worth $US29 billion ($39 billion) when launched a year ago, the value of the deal had failed by the time it was finalized, due to falls in share prices.

Block’s accounts show the company paid $US13.8 billion in shares for Afterpay when the deal closed in January this year, and $US11.6 billion of what it acquired is classified as goodwill.

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The company’s chief financial officer, Amrita Ahuja, responded to a question about Block’s ongoing accounting of the goodwill in Afterpay by saying the company assessed value periodically.

Block reported a net loss of $US208 million for the June quarter, while the company’s measure of adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization were $US187 million. It said Afterpay contributed $US208 million in revenue.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Daniel Perlin said Block’s revenue trends were encouraging, but he highlighted a slowdown in the growth in Block’s gross payment volumes.

Meanwhile, a report from Fitch Ratings on Friday predicted growing challenges for the BNPL sector, pointing to rising unemployment in the US and the waning effect of COVID-19 stimulus payments from the government.

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Categories
Sports

David Klemmer; Kalyn Ponga return to training; club accused of racism

“The club has instigated a new procedure to ensure due process and procedural fairness is consistently applied, including mediation by the director of football prior to escalation of any matters to the group chief executive officer or human resources in future.”

With Klemmer back on deck, the focus now shifts to Ponga’s return. Ponga consulted with Dr Chris Levi – a neurologist who has treated Boyd Cordner, Tim Glasby and many other NRL players after repeated head knocks – after coming from the field five times this year for head injury assessments.

On three of those occasions, most recently after a collision with Rooster prop Matt Lodge last month – he did not return to the fray.

Levi didn’t want to speak specifically about Ponga’s situation, citing doctor-patient confidentiality. However, he said that players who have typically had that number of head knocks generally need six to eight weeks to recover.

“In general situations of multiple concussion occurrences, longer periods of about six to eight weeks are recommended,” Levi told the herald.

“There is huge variability in the severity of concussions. A lot of the variability comes down to the individual’s resilience and the clinical recoveries.

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“It’s not a one-size-fits-all situation.”

That timeframe effectively rules Put out for the rest of the NRL season, but could result in him being available for the World Cup if he doesn’t show post-concussive symptoms.

“Because there isn’t a hard and fast rule, you will get differences of opinion about this,” Levi said.

“Some people will be more conservative. in my view, [the World Cup recovery timeline] would be very conservative, but it would not be wrong.

“The construct of the decision-making process is doctor and patient, and the recommendation is a joint consensus position. The doctor may recommend you do this, but it’s not as if you can’t push back.

“Sometimes it’s more conservative given the player or context. I’m speaking in generalities, but if we’re talking about a flurry of events – two or three in the preceding month or so – then you look at six to eight weeks as a reasonable rest period.”

Told that Ponga was back training with his teammates, Levi said it was a positive.

“The most important thing in a situation like this is that the person’s mental health, wellbeing, morale, sense of purpose is supported,” he said.

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