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US

China fires missiles near waters off Taiwan as live-fire drills intensify



CNN

China fired multiple missiles toward waters near northeastern and southwestern Taiwan on Thursday, the island’s Defense Ministry said, as Beijing makes good on its promise that Taipei will pay a price for hosting US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The Chinese military’s Eastern Theater Command said in a statement that multiple missiles had been fired into the sea off the eastern part of Taiwan. It said all the missiles hit their target accurately.

“The entire live-fire training mission has been successfully completed and the relevant air and sea area control is now lifted,” China’s statement said. Earlier, the Eastern Theater Command said it had conducted long-range, live-fire training in the Taiwan Strait, state broadcaster CCTV reported, as part of planned military exercises around the island.

Taiwan reported Chinese long-range rockets had fallen near its islands of Matsu, Wuqiu, Dongyin, which are in the Taiwan Strait, but located closer to the mainland than the main island of Taiwan. It later said a total of 11 Dongfeng (DF) missiles were fired to the waters north, south and east of the island between 1:56 pm and 4 pm local time (from 1:56 am ET to 4 am ET) on Thursday.

Chinese state media said that exercises to simulate an air and sea “blockade” around Taiwan had started Wednesday, but offered little solid evidence to back up the claim. Later Thursday, images showed military helicopters flying past Pingtan island, one of Taiwan’s closest points to mainland China.

The military posturing was a deliberate show of force after Pelosi left the island on Wednesday evening, bound for South Korea, one of the final stops on an Asia tour that ends in Japan this weekend.

Within hours of her departure from Taipei on Wednesday, the island’s Defense Ministry said China sent more than 20 fighter jets across the median line in the Taiwan Strait, the midway point between the mainland and Taiwan that Beijing says it does not recognize but usually respects.

Tourists look on as a Chinese military helicopter flies past Pingtan island, one of mainland China's closest point from Taiwan on August 4, 2022.

On Thursday, Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said its military was remaining in a “normal” but wary posture, and called the live-fire drills an “irrational act” that attempted to “change the status quo.”

“We are closely monitoring enemy activities around the sea of ​​Taiwan and that of outlying islands, and we will act appropriately,” the ministry said in a statement.

Taiwan also accused China of “following North Korea’s example of arbitrary test-fire of missiles in waters close to other countries” in a statement issued by its Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Thursday.

The exercises have caused disruption to flight and ship schedules, with some international flights canceled and vessels urged to use alternative routes for several ports around the island.

Well in advance of Pelosi’s near 24-hour visit to Taiwan, China had warned her presence was not welcome. The ruling Chinese Communist Party claims the self-governed island as its own territory, despite never having controlled it.

China issued a map showing six zones around Taiwan that would be the site of drills in coming days. But on Thursday, Taiwan’s Maritime and Port Bureau said in a notice that China had added a seventh military exercise area for ships and aircraft to avoid “in the waters around eastern Taiwan.”

Chinese state media on Thursday outlined a broad range of objectives for the exercises, including strikes on land and sea targets.

“The exercises (are) focused on key training sessions including joint blockade, sea target assault, strike on ground targets, and airspace control operation, and the joint combat capabilities of the troops got tested in the military operations,” said an announcement from the Xinhua news agency attributed to the People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) Eastern Theater Command, which has responsibility for the areas near Taiwan.

Chinese military helicopters fly past Pingtan island in Fujian province on Aug. 4.

Meanwhile, the Global Times tabloid said the drills involved some of China’s newest and most sophisticated weaponry, including J-20 stealth fighters and DF-17 hypersonic missiles, and that some missiles may be fired over the island – a move that would be extremely provocative.

“The exercises are unprecedented as the PLA conventional missiles are expected to fly over the island of Taiwan for the first time,” the Global Times said, citing experts.

“The PLA forces will enter areas within 12 nautical miles of the island and the so-called median line will cease to exist.”

Accounts from Taiwan of Chinese military movement included the fighter jets crossing the median line and a report from Taiwan’s government-run Central News Agency, citing government sources, that two of China’s most powerful warships – Type 55 destroyers – were sighted Tuesday off the central and southeastern coast of the island, the closest being within 37 miles (60 kilometers) of land.

But there was little corroboration or firm evidence provided by China to back up the sort of claims posted in the Global Times.

China’s state-run television offered video of fighter jets taking off, ships at sea and missiles on the move, but the dates of when that video was shot could not be verified.

Some analysts were skeptical Beijing could pull off what they were threatening, such as a blockade of Taiwan.

“The official announcement (of the blockade) refers to just a few days, which would make it hard to qualify it on practical terms to a blockade,” said Alessio Patalano, professor of war and strategy at King’s College in London.

“Blockades are hard to execute and long to implement. This exercise is not that,” he said.

Patalano said the biggest impact of the exercises would be psychological.

“During the period of time in question, ships and aircraft will likely reroute to avoid the area, but this is one primary objective of the chosen locations: create disruption, discomfort, and fear of worse to come,” he said.

Chinese military helicopters fly past Pingtan island, one of mainland China's closest point from Taiwan on August 4, 2022.

China’s retaliatory exercises have already caused disruption to flight and ship schedules in Taiwan, though the island is trying to lessen their impact.

Taiwan’s transportation minister said agreements had been reached with Japan and the Philippines to reroute 18 international flight routes departing from the island – affecting about 300 flights in total – to avoid the PLA’s live-fire drills.

Korean Air told CNN on Thursday that it has canceled flights from Incheon to Taiwan scheduled for Friday and Saturday due to safety reasons while China conducts its military drills. Flights will resume on Sunday.

On Wednesday, Taiwan’s Maritime and Port Bureau issued three notices, asking vessels to use alternative routes for seven ports around the island.

China’s planned live-fire drills were also causing unease in Japan.

Japan’s chief cabinet secretary, Hirokazu Matsuno, said the drills posed a threat to his country’s security.

One of the six exercise areas set up by China was near Japan’s Yonaguni Island, part of Okinawa prefecture and only 68 miles (110 kilometers) off the coast of Taiwan.

That same Chinese exercise zone is also close to the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands, a rocky uninhabited chain known as the Diaoyus in China, and over which Beijing claims sovereignty.

“In particular, a training area has been set up in the waters near Japan, and if China were to conduct live ammunition exercises in such an area, it could affect the security of Japan and its people,” Matsuno said.

Meanwhile, the United States military was silent on the Chinese exercises and did not provide any answers to CNN questions on Thursday.

Pelosi met Taiwanese President President Tsai Ing-wen in Taipei on Aug. 3.

Besides keeping a close eye on Chinese military movements around the island, Taiwan also said it would strengthen security against cyberattacks and disinformation campaigns.

Taiwan’s cabinet spokesperson Lo Ping-cheng said in a Wednesday news conference that the government had enhanced security at key infrastructure points and increased the level of cybersecurity alertness across government offices.

Taiwan is anticipating increased “cognitive warfare,” referring to disinformation campaigns used to sway public opinion, Lo said.

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Entertainment

From Nitram to The Stranger: Daniel Morcombe film reignites debate about ‘profiting from pain’ | australian movie

The seemingly unresolvable ethical dilemma of basing films on true tragedies and crimes, especially without the involvement of victims’ loved ones or survivors, is again up for debate ahead of the Australian premiere of a controversial new film, The Stranger.

Thomas M Wright’s film, which debuted at Cannes in May and premieres at the Melbourne international film festival on Friday, centers on the lengthy undercover police operation to capture the man responsible for the 2003 murder of 13-year-old Queensland schoolboy Daniel Morcombe.

Starring Joel Edgerton and Sean Harris, The Stranger does not depict the shocking crime or even use Daniel’s name because, as director Wright told Variety in May, “I couldn’t presume to know anything of the experience of that family. But I could see that there was a story about empathy and making meaning in the wake of violence – not violence itself.”

But in July, Daniel’s parents, Bruce and Denise Morcombe, called for audiences to boycott the film ahead of its premiere in Melbourne and general release later in 2022.

“The movie is not supported or sanctioned in any way by the Morcombe family,” the parents wrote on the Facebook page for the Daniel Morcombe Foundation.

While they have not seen the film, the Morcombes said its sheer connection to Daniel’s murder had upset them: “Its appalling storyline ignores our family’s pain and chooses to profit from 13 year old Daniel Morcombe’s death. In a twisted way, it also provides oxygen to a sadistic beast by notarizing his evil acts from him. ”

The Morcombes had previously declined an offer from production company See Saw Films to contribute to the film, and described the decision to go ahead without their cooperation as “a low act”.

From left: Joel Edgerton, Thomas M Wright and Sean Harris at the photocall for The Stranger at Cannes film festival in May
From left: Joel Edgerton, Thomas M Wright and Sean Harris at the photocall for The Stranger at the Cannes film festival in May. Photograph: Stephane Cardinale/Corbis/Getty Images

“Out of our deepest respect for the family, the name of the victim is never mentioned in the film and the film does not depict any details of the murder. Nor is the family represented in the film in any way,” See Saw told Guardian Australia. “When the film was first in development, the producers approached the family to make them aware of the film. They declined to be involved. It is a decision we continue to respect.”

Where can the lines be drawn – between personal grief and trauma, the pursuit of art to make sense of tragedy, and the commercial realities of the film industry?

‘A really difficult balancing act’: entertainment or social commentary?

Australian cinema has a robust history of adapting real crime stories. Last year, a similar controversy arose with the release of Justin Kurzel’s film Nitram, based on the 1996 Port Arthur massacre. Like The Stranger, Nitram did not use the perpetrator’s real name or depict the shootings; instead it focused on the months before the shooter acquired his deadly arsenal from him.

But for many Tasmanians, the memory was still too raw to stomach, 25 years on; in Hobart, the premiere screening was half empty. A spokesperson for a foundation set up in memory of its victims said: “Films like this do nothing to help the understanding of such grotesque, violent and inhumane acts… we understand it’s a really difficult balancing act. But we’re not interested in giving the perpetrator a moment in the sun.”

Andrew Dominik’s 2000 film Chopper, based on the autobiographical books by convicted felon Mark “Chopper” Read, was lambasted by some in the media for heroising a violent thug. “He’s a character in a movie,” Dominik said in a recent interview with the Guardian. “I’m not trying to marry him.”

John Jarratt’s turn as killer Mick Taylor in the 2005 film Wolf Creek was based on the Australian serial killer Ivan Milat and Bradley John Murdoch, who murdered British backpacker Peter Falconio in the Northern Territory. And Kurzel’s 2011 debut Snowtown was based on the grisly “bodies in the barrels murders” in South Australia in the 1990s. After relatives of the victims complained about the film to South Australia’s Commissioner for Victims’ Rights, a consultation process was set up between the film-makers and the relatives ahead of its general release.

Prof Jane Stadler, an academic who has written extensively about cinema and ethics, told the Australian Guardian that the intended effect on the audience – and the strategies used to achieve it – should be taken into account when judging a film.

“The choice of focus – is it from the perspective of the protagonist or the antagonist – influences those who we may feel care, concern or understanding,” she says.

While true crime docudramas such as Catching Milat and Netflix’s Unbelievable typically situate the audience with victims and their families, lines are blurred when it comes to films that seek to transform real crimes into fictional entertainment, as these “often place the audience in close psychological proximity to the killer and their victims, to augment excitation and fear as the crime takes place,” Stadler says.

“This leaves film-makers open to accusations that they are profiting from pain, sadism and death … especially when the subject matter is real murders within living memory.”

Caleb Landry Jones in Nitram
Caleb Landry Jones in Nitram

Take Wolf Creek, as an example. “Fans of horror and thrillers enjoy feeling fear in the safety of the cinema, and that is what made Wolf Creek successful,” Stadler says. But Wolf Creek included depictions of what Milat and Murdoch really said and did, “which also put the audience in the ethically uncomfortable position of enjoying a leisure and entertainment activity based on a real person’s agony and terror.”

Stadler says it is understandable that any perceived commodification of victims’ experiences could be viewed as insensitive, intrusive and traumatic. However, in social realist films such as Snowtown and Nitram, she believes the intended effect is societal insight and cultural criticism – not entertainment.

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“Such films may foster ethical insight, elicit moral emotions such as righteous anger or compassion, and channel care and concern toward prosocial action or the prevention of social problems,” she says.

However, good intentions do not mean that these films only have a positive impact, she says: “[The Port Arthur gunman] was reportedly inspired by media coverage of mass shootings, and delighted by the media attention he garnered. Media stories of all kinds may fan the flames of gun violence by stoking shooters’ desire for attention and notoriety and fueling a macabre fascination or voyeuristic tendency in the public.”

‘Does my name belong to me?’

While The Stranger is the latest film to stoke this debate, it is not a new one, nor one unique to Australia.

In July 2021, Amanda Knox, the US exchange student who was wrongfully convicted and then acquitted of the murder of her housemate in Italy, shared her feelings about Stillwater. The film, directed by Tom McCarthy and starring Matt Damon, was directly based on her story of her and time in prison – but she was not involved.

“Does my name belong to me?” Knox wrote. “Does my face? What about my life? My story? Why is my name used to refer to events I had no hand in? I return to these questions because others continue to profit off my name, face, and story without my consent.”

In China, the film-makers behind The Playground are being sued by the family of Deng Shiping, a school administrator who was murdered and buried in a sports field after attempting to expose corruption in the construction industry. His body was discovered 16 years later. A popular tag on Chinese social media site Weibo, viewed more than 300m times, has described the film-makers as “consuming the dead”.

And there have been countless films based on high school shootings in the US over the past two decades, including Gus Van Sant’s controversial 2003 film Elephant, which won the Palme d’Or at Cannes and was based on the 1999 Columbine massacre. According to reports, that film was watched by a 16-year-old gunman weeks before he killed nine people at a Minnesota school shooting in 2005.

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Dr Tim Dean, a senior philosopher at the Ethics Center in Sydney, says it is human nature to try to make sense of horrific events, and to ask why and how they happen, “to restore our sense of understanding of the world and our sense agency in the world”.

“As a philosopher, I mourn the loss of the cultural tools that we used to have to make sense of the darker aspects of life,” he says.

“When you think about fairytales from 200 years ago, they are far darker than the tales we tell children today. The mythologies that we passed down from generation to generation weren’t just about positive events, great triumphs and heroes… there was an entire genre of tragedy.”

However, fictionalizing and rehashing crimes will always be a traumatic experience for some, especially the loved ones of victims or survivors.

“We have a need to understand and confront the full range of human emotion and human behaviours. So I do think that there is a legitimate argument that art should be able to explore this,” Dean says. “But it has to be done sensitively and needs to be done in good faith. And that’s always going to be a vexed issue.”

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Sports

Alastair Clarkson a ‘real chance’ to land at North Melbourne Kangaroos after meeting with president Sonja Hood, says Eddie McGuire

Alastair Clarkson and his management have met with North Melbourne president Sonja Hood, with the club going “all in” on the mastercoach, according to Eddie McGuire.

Clarkson has begun the interview process as he looks to find his next AFL home, with the four-time premiership winner also meeting with the GWS Giants, who are currently without a coach for next season.

The 54-year-old’s manager, James Henderson, told McGuire the meeting with North went “very well”, calling it a “worthwhile experience”, with the two parties set to reconvene in the coming fortnight.

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“North Melbourne have gone all in on Alastair Clarkson, there is no Plan B at the moment,” McGuire told Nine’s Footy Classified.

“If he doesn’t go they’ll come up with a Plan B, but they have shown they want him.

“My understanding is that Alastair Clarkson is now thinking more about coaching next year than not. His management has said, ‘You know you don’t have to coach next year’, and I think he’s thought, ‘You know what? I’ m a coach so I’m going to coach’.

“North are now a real chance to land this bloke, but he wants to bring his own team and he’s put his team together. Part of his thinking might well be do they all want to go and live in GWS or can we do this at NorthMelbourne.

“There’s no doubt that the list at GWS attracts Alastair Clarkson, but the romance and maybe the practicalities mean that he could well be the coach of North Melbourne.”

Clarkson is one of four coaches to have been interviewed by the Giants, a list which includes current interim coach Mark McVeigh, as well as lead Melbourne assistant Adem Yze and Richmond assistant Adam Kingsley, according to Matthew Lloyd.

While the Kangaroos are still no certainties to land the biggest fish available on the coaching market, former AFL coach Ross Lyon praised the club’s “singular focus”.

“They really need to go all in. It’s a really good sign,” he told Footy Classified.

“If he can bring in his key people it’s probably a high performance coach, a football analyst, a football manager, those real pillars of success around him. He knows what needs to be done (and) he knows who to bring.

“It’s a super plan. I think he gets time there. No one expected them to make the eight. They’ve got greenshoots, a young midfield, but the dynamic wasn’t working there (with David Noble), so they made the change.

“He’ll get time and he’ll build a great environment.”

Port Adelaide is also a club that has been linked with Clarkson, having slid out of the top eight this year, but McGuire believes the club is reluctant to part ways with current senior coach Ken Hinkley, who has a year to run on his contract after this season.

“They believe that he is the man, if you’ve got a good coach stick with him at least for the next year,” he said.

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“It would take something quite incredible (for Hinkley’s departure). Maybe Ken gets to the end of the year and says, ‘You know what? I haven’t got anything more to give’.

“I think it’s more he would have to leave rather than Port sacking him, unless they get flogged in the last three weeks.”

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Australia

Gender pay gap remains worst for women in WA despite uptick in those working, report finds

Women are participating in the workforce at a higher rate than ever before in Western Australia but they still face the biggest gender pay gap in the country, a report has found.

The WA government’s 2022 Women’s Report Card — which measures the health, safety, economic independence and leadership opportunities of the state’s women — says female participation in the workforce is the highest it has ever been.

The report shows female participation in the workforce has reached 64.5 per cent, a rise of more than 3 per cent since 2007.

Among these working women, just over 50 per cent are employed full-time, compared with 82.6 per cent of men.

A row of people in chef uniforms cooking and preparing on a stainless steel bench.
Female participation in the WA workforce is up to more than 64 per cent, the report says.(ABC News: Cason Ho)

The report also reveals changing attitudes on gender roles.

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US

How Coal Mining and Years of Neglect Left Kentucky Towns at the Mercy of Flooding

More people will probably be making this decision when they realize how long and arduous the recovery will be, Mr. Weinberg said. And when they go, they will take tax revenue with them, leaving cash-strapped local governments with even less.

“It’ll be a partial government that does what they can, which won’t be much,” Mr. Weinberg said.

There are people and groups throughout the mountains — like Appalshop, the arts and cultural organization in Whitesburg that was badly damaged in the floods — that have been working for years to remake eastern Kentucky into a flourishing region that is no longer dependent on coal mines. The Kentucky governor, Andy Beshear, is already talking with lawmakers about a substantial flood relief package, and the FEMA administrator has pledged to assist in the recovery “as long as you need us.”

But unless Congress provides additional money for people to rebuild or replace their homes — a process that can take years, if it happens at all — many flood victims will have to rely on savings, charity or whatever other help they can find. And many are asking how much there is left to preserve.

On Tuesday, Bill Rose, 64, was slowly shoveling away the mounds of mud outside the mechanic shop in Fleming-Neon where he and his brother like to tinker on old cars. Like so many others, he talked about the resilience people must have to live here. He said he was committed to staying.

“You build back,” he said.

But he made it clear he was talking about himself. Not his children from him.

He was grateful when his daughter left for work as a nurse closer to Louisville, Ky. She loved it here but there was nothing for her de ella — no jobs, no opportunities, nothing to do. After the cataclysm of last week, there was even less.

“My generation,” Mr. Rose said, “will probably be the last generation.”

Categories
Entertainment

Jane Fonda plastic surgery: Star ‘not proud’ of facelift

Jane Fonda is opening up about a past plastic surgery procedure, and admits she “is not proud” of having a facelift.

During an interview with fashion published this week, Fonda, 84, got candid about going under the knife.

“I had a facelift and I stopped because I don’t want to look distorted. I’m not proud of the fact that I had [one],” the iconic actress said.

“Now, I don’t know if I had it to do over if I would do it. But I did it. I admit it, and then I just say, OK, you can get addicted. Don’t keep doing it. A lot of women, I don’t know, they’re addicted to it,” she said.

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Fonda said expensive face creams are not part of her daily skincare routine.

“I don’t do a lot of facials. I don’t spend a lot of money on face creams or anything like that, but I stay moisturised, I sleep, I move, I stay out of the sun, and I have good friends who make me laugh. Laughter is a good thing too.”

the Grace and Frankie actress also told the media outlet about her H&M Move campaign and how she still feels youthful in her 80s.

“I’m almost 85, but I don’t seem that old,” Fonda said. “So getting young people to stop being afraid of being old, helping people realize that just because you’re a certain age doesn’t mean you have to give up on life, give up on having fun… or whatever you want to do. ”

The H&M Move campaign is focused on “getting the whole world moving” – something Fonda has said she’s “been doing a lot of” in her own life.

The Oscar-winning star pointed out that aging does not have to be intimidating, and she wants more people to be aware that it can be positive and healthy.

“I know better than I did even when I was younger that no matter how old you are or who you are or where you are, keeping moving in a way that’s appropriate for your age is absolutely critical to your healthy lifespan.”

This story originally appeared on Fox News and is republished here with permission

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Categories
Sports

Lance Franklin, trade from Sydney Swans, move to Brisbane, Buddy, latest, contract, salary

Sydney Swans CEO Tom Harley says a report linking Lance Franklin to the Brisbane Lions is “news to him”.

According to Channel 9, Franklin, who is coming to the end of his nine-year multimillion-dollar dear with the Swans, wants to continue his career at the Lions.

Speaking off-air to 3AW Sportsday after an interview, Harley said it was “news to him”.

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Franklin’s future has been one of the hot topics in recent weeks, with 35-year-olds, who became just the sixth player in AFL/VFL history to kick 1000 goals earlier this year, wanting to play on.

According to the report, Franklin’s move would be in part because of his family’s desire to relocate north of the border.

The move would be a massive boost for the Lions, who have struggled to rid the unwanted pretender title after being a contender for years.

One of those reasons is because Lions haven’t won at the MCG for close to a decade, but Franklin’s arrival would give Fagan’s team a premiership-winner who lifts in the big moments.

It would also add to the Lions’ lethal forward line, where he would join Joe Daniher, Eric Hipwood and Charlie Cameron.

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Categories
Australia

Adelaide Remand Center general manager revealed as the who stole $100,000 prisoners of suspect’ money

A suppression order on the identity of Adelaide Remand Center’s general manager, who is charged with theft, has now been lifted.

Brenton Williams is accused of stealing more than $100,000 of prisoners’ money.

The offense was allegedly committed between April 27 and July 27 this year.

The 47-year-old was arrested last week and charged with an aggravated count of dishonestly taking property without consent.

His identity was suppressed by the Adelaide Magistrates Court “in the interests of the administration of justice”.

An item of clothing hangs from the exterior of the Adelaide Remand Centre.
The Adelaide Remand Center general manager is accused of stealing more than $100,000 of prisoner’s cash. (ABC News: Alina Eaton)

That suppression order was lifted today, after the police prosecutor confirmed she did not want to pursue it.

The Department for Correctional Services says it will launch an independent investigation into theft.

“The department’s main priorities are the welfare of employees at the Adelaide Remand Center and the person who is currently before the courts,” a departmental spokeswoman said last week.

Serco, the private company that runs prisons in Adelaide’s CBD, said it would also be working with police.

Williams did not apply for bail and was remanded in custody, with the case scheduled to return to court in October.

Corrections Minister Joe Szakacs said the allegations are deeply concerning.

“It is incredibly disappointing to be informed of these serious allegations relating to the senior Serco employee at the privately run Adelaide Remand Centre,” said Mr Szakacs.

“These are serious allegations, which I’m deeply concerned about.

“I want answers, and a full review is being undertaken by DCS to investigate this matter.

“As the matter is now before the courts, the state government cannot make any further comment.”

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Categories
US

China begins live ammunition drills near Taiwan after Pelosi visit

The Chinese military began live ammunition drills near Taiwan on Thursday in a days-long apparent show of force after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to the self-governing island.

Latest: Taiwan’s Ministry of Defense said it activated its defense systems after China’s military launched multiple ballistic missiles into Taipei’s northeast and southwest waters. “We condemn such irrational action that has jeopardized regional peace,” the ministry said.

  • China’s military said earlier it had conducted “long-range armed live fire precision missile strikes” in the eastern region of the Taiwan Strait, as its state media described the exercises as a “joint blockade, sea target assault, strike on ground targets, and airspace control.”

Meanwhile, Taiwan’s Maritime Port Bureau reported that the Chinese military had added a seventh zone for its exercise encircling the self-governing island.

Why it matters: The zones the Chinese military outlined for the drills encircle Taiwan and some areas cross into territorial waters claimed by the island, the New York Times notes, raising alarm about the potential for dangerous accidents or miscalculation.

  • The Chinese military warned boats and plans to avoid the areas from Thursday through Sunday for the drills, which the Taiwanese Ministry of Defense said violate Taipei’s sovereignty and greater amount “to a blockade of Taiwan’s air and sea space.”
  • The planned exercises “unilaterally undermine regional peace and stability,” the ministry said in a statement Wednesday. “This move will not help China’s international image and will hurt people on both sides of the strait.”
  • The current tensions echo the 1996 cross-strait crisis.

What they’re saying: China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters from the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit in Cambodia on Wednesday that Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan was a “complete farce.”

  • He said the “irreversible historical trend of Taiwan’s return to the motherland cannot be changed” and those “who offend China will surely be punished.”

Catch-up quick: The Chinese government announced the exercises as Pelosi arrived in Taiwan on Tuesday for an overnight visit that angered Beijing, which had warned of “serious consequences” in the days leading up to the trip.

  • Pelosi, the most senior US lawmaker to visit the island since 1997, made the trip despite President Biden saying publicly that the US military felt it was “not a good idea right now.”
  • “Now more than ever America’s solidarity with Taiwan is crucial,” Pelosi said early Wednesday local time as she met with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-Wen.
  • Despite the heightened tensions, many in Taipei expressed appreciation for Pelosi’s support, Axios’ Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian reports from Taiwan. Tsai said Wednesday that Taiwan will never back down amid heightened security threats.

Flash back: China, angered over a visit to the US by then-Tawainese President Lee Teng-hui, conducted missile tests in 1996, with missiles landing in waters off Taiwan and one flying almost directly over the capital, Taipei, Allen-Ebrahimian writes.

  • The US, meanwhile, sent two aircraft carrier groups through the Taiwan Strait.

Go deeper… In photos: China’s military drills encircle Taiwan

Editor’s note: This article has been updated with new details throughout.

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Categories
Sports

Andrew Johns, Brad Fittler and Nine experts pick their winners

Phil Gould has tipped Manly to put the split in the dressing room aside and roll the Eels to get back into final contention and end a horror fortnight for the club.

Speaking on Wide World of Sports’ Six Tackles with Gus podcast, Gould said both sides had plenty to prove, with the Eels putting in a dismal second half performance against 12 men in their win over the Panthers, while an undermanned Sea Eagles line-up were no match for the Roosters after plumbing the depths of their roster due to the pride jersey boycott by the ‘Manly Seven’.

The Friday night match-up between the traditional rivals comes at a pivotal time for both clubs, with the Eels pulling within reach of a top four berth and Manly needing to win at least four of their last five games to make the finals.

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To make things more interesting, the Eels are without their most dominant player, injured halfback Mitchell Moses, with coach Brad Arthur’s son Jake getting another crack at a starting berth just weeks after he was booed by his home fans.

While many have already written off the Sea Eagles due to the disharmony within their ranks, Gould said there was no coach better than Des Hasler to calm the storm and get the Sea Eagles back on track.

“It’ll be a big test for both these teams,” Gould said. “Firstly for Manly, bringing these players back in that stood down last week, and whatever disharmony that has caused or dissension, but we don’t know, we’re not on the inside.

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“That’s a man management job for Des Hasler and there’s no one better to handle that.”

Gould added that the Sea Eagles’ performance against the Roosters “was very meritorious” considering the circumstances.

Sea Eagles put player split behind them

“The spirit with which they played was tremendous,” Gould said.

“I’m going back Des Hasler. I’m going Manly.”

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Andrew Johns: Roosters, Storm, Sea Eagles, Rabbitohs, Raiders, Sharks, Cowboys, Knights

Brad Fittler: Roosters, Storm, Sea Eagles, Rabbitohs, Raiders, Sharks, Cowboys, Tigers

Darren Lockyer: Broncos, Storm, Sea Eagles, Rabbitohs, Raiders, Sharks, Cowboys, Tigers

Billy Slater: Roosters, Storm, Eels, Rabbitohs, Panthers, Sharks, Cowboys, Tigers

Ruan Sims: Roosters, Storm, Sea Eagles, Rabbitohs, Raiders, Dragons, Cowboys, Tigers

Paul Gallen: Roosters, Storm, Eels, Rabbitohs, Raiders, Sharks, Bulldogs, Tigers

Peter Psaltis: Broncos, Storm, Sea Eagles, Rabbitohs, Raiders, Sharks, Cowboys, Tigers

Matt Thompson: Broncos, Storm, Sea Eagles, Rabbitohs, Panthers, Sharks, Bulldogs, Tigers

Dave Middleton: Roosters, Storm, Eels, Rabbitohs, Raiders, Sharks, Cowboys, Tigers

The Mole: Roosters, Storm, Eels, Rabbitohs, Panthers, Sharks, Cowboys, Knights

Ben Glover: Roosters, Storm, Sea Eagles, Rabbitohs, Raiders, Sharks, Cowboys, Tigers

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