Categories
Sports

‘Disability isn’t a dirty word’: non-binary Paralympian Robyn Lambird on smashing stereotypes and setting agendas

“What happened to you?”

“Jesus can heal you.”

“Can you have sex?”

“You’re pretty for someone in a wheelchair.”

Believe it or not, these are all things Robyn Lambird says strangers have said to them.

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But they’ve embraced their profile as a Paralympian to shatter misconceptions and make their mark on and off the race track.

The beauty in disability and diversity

Lambird is a non-binary wheelchair racer from Perth, and made their Paralympic debut at Tokyo last year, winning a bronze medal in the T34 100m final.

Wheelchair racer Robyn Lambird pumps their fists after winning a bronze medal
Lambird won a bronze medal in their Paralympic debut in Tokyo. (AAP: Drew Chislett)

Their immediate focus is the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham where they’ll contest the women’s T33/34 100m.

It will hold special significance for the England-born sprinter to compete in front of family members, including both sets of grandparents, for the first time.

The 25-year-old also competes in the national wheelchair rugby league, studies digital and social media at university, and has built an impressive following online as a content creator and activist.

Lambird’s Instagram account is full of engaging posts, educating, entertaining, and illuminating.

It ranges from fashion tips to training diaries, to important messages around queer pride and disability awareness.

Lambird has cerebral palsy, and one of the clear messages they want to get across is that disability isn’t a dirty word.

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“I think on some level in our society, we still see disability as this inherently negative thing,” Lambird said.

“[The idea that] this tragedy happened to someone and that’s why we shy away from the word disabled, and all of these other euphemisms, differently abled.

“But, to me, the word disabled is a source of pride because I’m proud of who I am now. And everything that I’ve done in my life, I’ve done with my disability, not despite it.

“It’s not our bodies that make us disabled at the end of the day, it’s the opportunities that we don’t have or it’s because the world is not accessible to us.”

Lambird says it’s up to everyone to advocate for people with a disability.

“If you as an able-bodied person go into a cafe, and you realize that it’s inaccessible, maybe ask why that’s the case? Or what can be done to make that environment accessible?,” they said.

“And if you notice that there’s no disabled people in your workplace, maybe you should be questioning that, why isn’t there opportunities for people with disabilities to get into those spaces?”

Role model for queer community

Lambird is also passionate about standing up for the queer community, something which has taken more prominence since they became the first out non-binary athlete to win a Paralympic medal in Tokyo.

“I think afterwards, I realized how important that was… in terms of helping other people to feel welcome in the sporting environment and to know that they have a future in the sport, if that’s what they want, and that they can they can be themselves,” they said.

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“That’s the thing that I really love about sport is it has this opportunity to bring people together to create this great sense of community.”

Lambird’s positive experiences in sport started in wheelchair rugby, which is a mixed gender sport.

Robyn Lambird in action playing wheelchair rugby.
Lambird also plays wheelchair rugby at a national level.(Wheelchair Sports NSW/ACT: Karen Watson)

They think it’s worth exploring whether more sports can follow its lead, to make it more inclusive for trans and gender diverse people.

“I just think everyone should have the opportunity to go to reap the benefits of sport, both mentally and physically,” they said.

“Sport has changed my life and has given me so many things, and I couldn’t imagine not being in the position that I am now.

“So I think we really just need to start sitting down and having conversations about how we can open that up to everyone and ensure that everyone feels like they have a place.”

There is no normal: finding a community online

Social media is an important part of Lambird’s life, giving them the opportunity to tell their own story, which is often overlooked by the mainstream media.

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“Any media that focuses on disability and tries to accurately portray that experience is important, but the people that really know what it’s like to live with a disability and to navigate the world as a disabled person are disabled people.

“And having that opportunity to take control of that narrative, and to show what disability looks like for us, and what is our truth, it’s incredibly important.”

Lambird still has a long sporting career ahead of them, but they have an eye on the future as well, and their ability to create lasting change.

“I think I always just find the beauty in diversity. Diversity is one of the world’s greatest teachers, I think we can learn so much about the world and our place in it just by listening to others,” they said.

“I’ve been very lucky to find an amazing community online and on social media, people that are just trying to lift each other up regardless of their gender or sexuality or their disability.

“And I think it’s challenging that idea that, there is not normal.”

Lambbird will compete in the T33/34 women’s 100m at the Commonwealth Games on Wednesday August 3 AEST.

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Categories
Australia

Craigmore boy whose death is being investigated suffered stomach pains, cardiac arrest before dying, his family says

The father of a young Adelaide boy whose death is being investigated by police has spoken of the “saddest day” he laid his son to rest.

WARNING: This story contains content that some readers may find upsetting.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains the name of a person who has died.

Kaurna-Narungga boy Makai, aged seven, died on February 10 but police yesterday revealed they have been investigating his death — the second suspected neglect case brought before the taskforce in less than a month.

ABC has spoken to Makai’s family and has obtained permission to use his name.

In a social media post, Makai’s father wrote the boy has been laid to rest in the new Kaurna Repatriation area at Smithfield Memorial Park in March.

“My son, Makai, will be the first Kaurna person to be laid to rest in a new location, designated for the Kaurna People,” he wrote.

“What an historic moment this will be and yet it will be the saddest day for me.”

In an earlier post, I thanked close family and friends who supported him and his child through “difficult and challenging time”.

“No father should watch his son die. Wouldn’t wish this on anyone. Not even my worst enemy,” the father wrote.

“The system I put my faith and trust in, failed me and my son,” he wrote in a separate post.

“I miss him so much, I wish he was here with me. I LOVE HIM,” he wrote on a different day.

Makai’s heart stopped three times

Makai’s relatives have claimed on a fundraising page that the Craigmore boy had suffered stomach pains in his final days.

The primary school student visited a doctor and had x-rays after complaining of stomach pains on February 7.

His doctor reviewed the x-ray results the next day and prescribed Makai laxatives.

Police Commissioner Mal Hyde
Former police commissioner Mal Hyde will lead a government review into the agencies’ interactions with Charlie and Makai’s families.(abcnews)

However, Makai took a turn for the worse the following day, where he could not move and started to hallucinate, his relatives wrote on the fundraising page.

On February 10, Makai — with a swollen belly — was rushed to the Lyell McEwin Hospital by his father.

His heart stopped beating and he went into cardiac arrest twice, and doctors were able to revive him.

Makai underwent emergency surgery and was placed into an induced coma to be transferred to the Women’s and Children’s Hospital.

During the ambulance trip, Makai’s father was told the boy might not survive the journey to the hospital.

After arriving, Makai’s heart stopped for a third time and doctors were not able to resuscitate him.

The coroner’s report released the following week showed the seven-year-old had died from pneumonia in both lungs, sepsis and the MRSA superbug, a drug-resistant form of golden staph.

A photo of Charlie wearing a cowboy hat
Police are investigating the death of Charlie for suspected neglect.(Supplied)

Makai’s relatives wrote the diagnosis was “a shock”, because pneumonia was not picked up at the Lyell McEwin Hospital nor by radiology.

The boy’s death is being investigated by Taskforce Prime, which was set up last month to investigate the death of six-year-old Charlie.

A government review — led by former police commissioner Mal Hyde — is underway to examine the interactions that agencies had with both children’s families and to identify any gaps in the child protection system.

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Categories
US

DHS watchdog halted efforts to obtain missing text messages from Secret Service, Trump officials

The watchdog at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) abandoned efforts to recover missing text messages from across its various agencies deleted in the wake of Jan. 6 and minimized its criticism of those that failed to produce them, according to emails released by lawmakers.

The evidence, released Monday by the House committees on Oversight and Homeland Security, was accompanied by a renewed call for Inspector General Joseph Cuffari to step aside from his investigations into how DHS agencies responded to the Jan. 6 attack.

“These documents raise troubling new concerns that your office not only failed to notify Congress for more than a year that critical evidence in this investigation was missing, but your senior staff deliberately chose not to pursue that evidence and then appear to have taken steps to cover up these failures,” the committees wrote in a letter to Cuffari.

The panel said it has also obtained evidence that Cuffari’s office has not attempted to seek records from a former DHS official’s personal cell phone.

The letter marks the second time in a week that Rep. Carolyn Maloney (DN.Y.), chair of the Committee on Oversight, and Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), chair of the Committee on Homeland Security, have asked for Cuffari to recuse himself from the investigation.

“Removing yourself from this investigation is even more urgent today,” they wrote.

The letter from the committees offers more details following a Friday report from The Washington Post outlining how Cuffari’s office halted efforts to recover or obtain text messages from the Secret Service or from top Trump-era DHS officials.

Cuffari first notified lawmakers earlier this month that some Secret Service agents’ text messages were “erased” as part of a device replacement program. (The agency contains any text messages that might be missing were lost through a software transition.)

Documents obtained by the Project on Government Oversight also indicate that Cuffari was unable to obtain text messages from acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf or his deputy Ken Cuccinelli.

In each case, Cuffari knew for months that the messages were lost, and only informed lawmakers of the issues with the Secret Service, a potential violation of laws governing inspectors general that require rapid notification of “particularly serious or flagrant” abuses of public records laws. .

“Your July 13, 2022, letter failed to mention that a year earlier, and just six weeks after you initially requested text messages of Secret Service personnel, senior officials in your office instructed the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) that the Office of Inspector General (OIG) no longer needed Secret Service text messages as part of its investigation related to the January 6 attack,” the committees wrote.

The two panels obtained emails from Cuffari’s deputy, Thomas Kait, directing a liaison to halt efforts to obtain text messages.

“Jim, please use this email as a reference to our conversation where I said we no longer request phone records and text messages from the USSS [United States Secret Service] relating to the events on January 6th,” Kait wrote on July 27.

The Office of Inspector General (OIG) would reverse course roughly four months later and seek some of the messages, but as the watchdog hit a wall in obtaining them, it diminished the issue in an agency memo.

A February document initially noted that OIG had failed to obtain the requested information. But Kait and others tweaked the document, instead writing that they “received a timely and consolidated response from each component to our December 3, 2021 request; however, additional and clarifying information is needed before we can complete the reviews.”

Other information obtained by the committee indicates that Cuffari’s office has been aware since January that Cuccinelli used his personal phone for DHS business, “yet your office did not seek to collect messages from this device,” it said.

Neither Cuffari’s office nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to request for comment.

The letter asks Cuffari to turn over all communications about the decision not to pursue the text messages, as well as all emails relating to their decision to finally notify Congress about the missing messages.

Concerns over Cuffari go beyond the two panels.

Senate Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) asked Attorney General Merrick Garland to intervene and overtake the Jan. 6 investigation at DHS. Thompson’s other committee, the House panel investigating the riot, also released a letter to Cuffari stating he likely violated the law by failing to ensure more timely notification of the missing records.

Updated: 5:18 pm

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Categories
Business

Gas giants hold emergency talks as minister threatens intervention

The ACCC on Monday said LNG exporters were contributing to the forecast 56-petajoule shortfall in 2023 by withdrawing 58 petajoules more gas from the domestic market than they expected to supply.

Gas producers on Monday disputed the suggestion a shortfall was looming, noting that the ACCC found that 167 petajoules of gas remained uncontracted and would be offered to local buyers first.

“This is more than enough gas to ensure that no shortfall occurs,” APPEA acting chief executive Damian Dwyer said. “Gas customers can be assured supply will be adequate next year so households and businesses can continue uninterrupted.”

A spokeswoman for APLNG, which the ACCC report noted was a “net contributor” to the east-coast gas market, urged governments to give greater attention to developing new sources of gas supply in southern states such as Victoria and NSW that need the fuel the most.

“We need to look beyond LNG producers, who invested billions of dollars to develop the LNG industry underpinned by long-term LNG offtake commitments to overseas buyers,” the spokesperson said. “To solve energy challenges on the east coast of Australia, it remains important to take steps to encourage investment in new supplies near southern markets closer to demand centres.”

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the ACCC's latest report from its ongoing inquiry into Australia's gas supply “highlights some alarming features of the east coast gas market”.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the ACCC’s latest report from its ongoing inquiry into Australia’s gas supply “highlights some alarming features of the east coast gas market”.Credit:James Brickwood

Major gas users on Monday declared the ACCC’s latest report had yet again painted an “alarming picture” for businesses that relied on the fossil fuel.

The Energy Users’ Association of Australia, whose members include ASX-listed fertilizer giant Incitec Pivot and building material supplier Brickworks, backed the decision to initiate the first steps of the gas security mechanism, but feared it would “not be enough”.

“It is time for governments and regulators to stop rattling the saber and to draw their sword,” chief executive Andrew Richards said. “It seems clear that threatening the gas industry with stronger actions is not enough.”

Credit Suisse energy analyst Saul Kavonic said the ACCC report appeared aimed at providing “ammunition” for the government to toughen up gas policies. But he said the situation was more likely to be resolved voluntarily rather than through formal market intervention.

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“We expect the government may declare a gas shortfall in 2023 and toughen up the regulatory framework, but ultimately pursue a ‘voluntary’ outcome whereby Queensland LNG producers agree to keep the market supplied for any shortfalls next year,” Kavonic said.

While Australia is one of the world’s top gas exporters, massive amounts are locked in to contracts to be sold to overseas buyers, or are in faraway parts of the country where it is expensive or impossible to supply demand centers in the south. Victoria’s offshore gas fields in the Bass Strait, which have traditionally supplied up to half of the eastern seaboard’s gas demand, remain in rapid decline.

“If we allow a disaster to happen because of a shortage of affordable gas – while we are the largest gas-exporting nation on the planet – this will represent a catastrophic failure,” Australian Workers Union secretary Dan Walton said.

While the ACCC’s report did not identify any wrongdoing, Treasurer Jim Chalmers said he encouraged the consumer watchdog to act if any anti-competitive behavior was uncovered in the future.

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“It’s critical that our domestic gas supply is secure and competitively priced, particularly when households and businesses are under extreme pressure,” he said.

“The ACCC has raised concerns about the level of competition in this market, and I welcome its commitment to look into this and take enforcement action as required.”

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

Categories
Technology

Hackers stole passwords for accessing 140,000 payment terminals

Hackers had access to dashboards used to remotely manage and control thousands of credit card payment terminals manufactured by digital payments giant Wiseasy, a cybersecurity startup told TechCrunch.

Wiseasy is a brand you might not have heard of, but it’s a popular Android-based payment terminal maker used in restaurants, hotels, retail outlets and schools across the Asia-Pacific region. Through its Wisecloud cloud service, Wiseeasy can remotely manage, configure and update customer terminals over the internet.

But Wiseasy employee passwords used for accessing Wiseasy’s cloud dashboards — including an “admin” account — were found on a dark web marketplace actively used by cybercriminals, according to the startup.

Youssef Mohamed, chief technology officer at pen-testing and dark web monitoring startup Buguard, told TechCrunch that the passwords were stolen by malware on the employee’s computers. Mohamed said two cloud dashboards were exposed, but neither were protected with basic security features, like two-factor authentication, and allowed hackers to access nearly 140,000 Wiseasy payment terminals around the world.

Payment systems are frequently targeted by financially driven hackers with the aim of skimming credit card numbers for committing fraud.

Buguard said it first contacted Wiseasy about the compromised dashboards in early July, but efforts to disclose the compromise were met with meetings with executives that were later canceled without warning, and according to Mohamed, the company declined to say if or when the cloud dashboards would be secured.

Screenshots of the dashboards seen by TechCrunch show an “admin” user with remote access to Wiseasy payment terminals, including the ability to lock the device and remotely install and remove apps. The dashboard also allowed anyone to view names, phone numbers, email addresses and access permissions for Wiseasy dashboard users, including the ability to add new users.

Another dashboard view also shows the Wi-Fi name and plaintext password of the network that payment terminals are connected to.

Mohamed said anyone with access to the dashboards could control Wiseasy payment terminals and make configuration changes.

When reached by TechCrunch, Wiseasy chief executive Jason Wang would not comment. In a separate email from Wiseasy spokesperson Ocean An, the company confirmed that the issues were remediated and that it had added two-factor authentication to the dashboards.

It’s not clear if the company plans to notify its customers of the security lapse.

Categories
Entertainment

Tom Cruise’s daughter Suri makes movie debut in Katie Holmes’ upcoming film, Alone Together

Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes’ daughter has made her on-screen debut.

Holmes, 43, directed and stars in the newly released movie Alone Togetherand her daughter Suri Cruise, 16, joined her on the big screen.

“I always want the highest level of talent,” Holmes said in an interview with Yahoo! Entertainment. “So, I asked her [Suri].

“She’s very, very talented. She said she would do it, and she recorded it, and I let her do her thing about her. That’s the way I direct in general. It’s like, ‘This is what I think we all want – go do your thing.’”

In the movie, Suri sings a cover of bluemoon, which plays during the opening credits of the film. Holmes told the outlet this will not be her daughter’s only on-screen singing gig, Fox News reports.

“She actually did sing in Rare Itemswhich is the film we did last [autumn],” Holmes said. “Other than that, she she’s a 16-year-old kid doing high school.”

Cruise and Holmes were married from 2006 to 2012. Suri is their only child together, and her uber-famous parents opted to keep her out of the public eye for the majority of her childhood.

Holmes directed, wrote and stars in Alone Together – a romantic comedy set during the Covid pandemic. Also appearing opposite her in the film is English actor Jim Sturgess.

The film follows a man and woman fleeing New York City during the first wave of the pandemic in 2020.

They end up booking the same Airbnb and ultimately decide to stay at the upstate property together.

Sturgess praised Holmes’ directing style and shared that she gives actors wide latitude when they are in front of the camera.

“She gives you this incredible space between action and cut,” Sturgess said of his co-star.

“She very rarely shouted, ‘Cut!’ actually. You’d think the scene had ended and she just kind of left it hanging. I love that she was always searching for those little nuggets of authenticity.”

This story originally appeared on Fox News and was reproduced with permission

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Categories
Sports

Brisbane Lions bosses angered after Richmond Tigers game, Marlion Pickett bumps Zac Bailey, video, hospitalized with sternum injury, coughing up blood, Mitch Robinson

‘Angered’ Lions bosses have spoken to the AFL about an on-field incident involving Marlion Pickett and Zac Bailey from Richmond’s come-from-behind seven-point win over Brisbane, according to veteran journalist Caroline Wilson.

Bailey spent Sunday night in hospital after getting subbed out of the game with a sternum issue following a collision with Pickett — an incident that received no sanction from the match review officer despite vision of the exchange showing the Tigers midfielder bump Bailey in the area off the ball.

Scans cleared the young Lions star of any serious injury as he was released from hospital on Monday to fly home to Brisbane, with the club still yet to rule him out of this week’s match against Carlton.

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However speaking on Channel 9’s Footy Classified on Monday night, Wilson reports Brisbane was “completely shattered” by the loss to the Tigers and “among their devastating was anger” due to Bailey’s clash with Pickett.

“Initial anger broke out after this incident early in the game involving Bailey and Pickett. There was a bump, there was a push, I know Brisbane bosses were talking to the AFL throughout the day,” she said.

“Bailey went to hospital, he was coughing up blood, he was very, very concerned, happily the news is a lot better today and he’s flown home.

“There’s been no citing from the match review officer, I think the incident was looked at and looked at and looked at again.”

“One quick one on Pickett, who has the ability to seriously hurt players because he’s a tough player — I think there will be words delivered to Richmond about his tactics.

“But there was a lot of anger, I think Brisbane has calmed down today.”

Tigers claw back to claim stunning win | 03:02

The MRO’s explanation of the incident read: “The incident involving Richmond’s Marlion Pickett and the Brisbane Lions’ Zac Bailey from the second quarter of Sunday’s match between Richmond and the Brisbane Lions was assessed. It was the view of the Match Review Officer that Pickett’s actions did not constitute a reportable offence. No further action was taken.”

Port Adelaide great Kane Cornes said he “didn’t see too much wrong” with the exchange and wasn’t sure what Brisbane was upset about.

Meanwhile speaking on Fox Footy’s AFL 360, Lions coach Chris Fagan confirmed the club hoped to have Bailey available for selection this week.

“He’s (Bailey) recovered well and is back in Brisbane. I think he’ll be fine this week, it was just he was coughing up a bit of blood and that’s not a good sign when that’s happening,” Fagan said.

“You have to be really careful when you see that. But as it turned out it was n’t anything of huge significance, which more than anything is pleasing for Zac and his health from him.

Wilson also reported Mitch Robinson and Brisbane have received a “please explain” from the AFL after the veteran gave his middle-finger to the Richmond cheer squad during the contest.

“I think he’s going to have to explain himself, but I don’t think there’ll be a fine,” she said.

Robinson, who missed a crucial potential go-ahead shot late in the game, took another cheeky swipe at Tigers fans on social media after the loss.

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Categories
Australia

Brisbane blanketed in thick fog, traffic warnings issued and flights diverted

Thick fog that blanketed parts of Brisbane this morning saw flights diverted and traffic warnings issued.

Some incoming domestic flights to Brisbane were diverted to regional airports due to the heavy fog.

Brisbane Airport said five flights were re-diverted to Coolangatta, Mackay and Rockhampton airports.

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By 9am the fog had lifted, with blue skies overhead.

Departing flights from Brisbane were only affected by minor delays.

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The Bureau of Meteorology issued a warning for drivers at 6:30am, saying reduced visibility due to the fog was making road conditions dangerous.

Other parts of the state were also experiencing heavy fog but it also lifted later in the morning.

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Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Shane Kennedy said many Brisbane suburbs woke up to fog.

“Mainly the south-east and also the western suburbs around Ipswich [got] quite thick fog this morning,” he said.

Foggy Southbank with scooters in the foreground and the Wheel of Brisbane behind.
Fog over Brisbane’s Southbank.

Mr Kennedy said there was likely more foggy mornings to come.

“Good chances there will be some morning fog, particularly in the west for the next couple of mornings,” he said.

He said Brisbane airport was “completely clouded in” early in the morning.

“Visibility [was] down around 200 meters at the airport.”

Aerial view of Brisbane CBD covered in fog.
An aerial view of Brisbane CBD shows how extensive the fog is over the city. (Supplied: Australian Traffic Network)

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Categories
US

Mother and five children among seven dead in wrong-way crash in Illinois

A mother, her four young children and one of the kids’ pals were among seven people killed in a horrific wrong-way crash in Illinois over the weekend, according to a report.

The family’s Chevrolet van — carrying Lauren Dobosz, 31, her four kids, husband and one of the children’s friends — was hit head-on by an Acura TSX going the wrong way in rural Riley outside Chicago around 2 am Sunday, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

The impact caused both vehicles to burst in to flames, killing Dobosz and the five kids.

The sole occupant of the Acura, Jennifer Fernandez, 22, was also killed.

Dobosz’s husband was airlifted to a hospital, where he remains in critical condition.

The mother was a cheerleading coach for a junior football team on Chicago’s Northwest Side, according to the outlet.

A fundraising effort by the shattered team had raised more than $12,000 for the family’s relatives Monday afternoon.

Lauren Dobosz and Thomas Dobosz
Thomas Dobosz, the husband and father of four, is the only survivor in the family vehicle.
Facebook/Lauren Dobosz
family car crash
The crash caused both cars to explode in flames.
Fox 32 Chicago
family car crash
The Acura TSX was going the wrong way.
Fox 32 Chicago
The sole occupant of the Acura, Jennifer Fernandez, 22, was also killed.
The Acura driver, Jennifer Fernandez, was pronounced dead.
Fox 32 Chicago
Lauren Dobosz and Thomas Dobosz
A GoFundMe raised $12,000 for the family’s funeral expenses.
GoFundMe/Lisa Torres

“Lauren always made a great impression on everyone she met, she was full of life, laughter, and always a good time,” the appeal read. “We’re going to miss you Lauren and your spunky, sweet, sassy kids and every so loved friend.”

The deceased Dobosz kids from Rolling Meadows were a 5-year-old girl, a 6-year-old boy, a 7-year-old boy and a 13-year-old girl, according to the ABC7 Chicago. The other killed child was a 13-year-old girl and friend of the eldest Dobosz kid.

The investigation into the crash is continuing.

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Categories
Business

a2 Milk’s top corporate daigou is no longer buying

However, when the market was once again buoyant, he claims his stock allocation was reduced – meaning he made less money – as a2 Milk pushed tins of formula into cross border e-commence.

Brand awareness remains strong for a2 Platinum in China, the biggest infant formula market in the world – valued in the region of $26 billion.

brand loyalty

But Mr Zhang says a2 Milk has lost sight of the power of the smaller daigou which helps propel brand loyalty with mothers amid a rise in nationalism of locally made products.

Smaller rival Bellamy’s in 2016 also sought to bypass this important channel to market, and it nearly went under.

“This is critical to renewing a brand’s consumption life cycle. In order for a brand to succeed, the brand, channel and consumer must be in vertical equilibrium,” Mr Zhang told The Australian Financial Review.

“If you disadvantage those who create value for your brand then there is a problem.”

The recruitment channel (such as daigou) has traditionally been closest to the consumer in China. These small businesses and distributors are on the front line to discuss the brand and educate consumers who recommend brands to new users.

Mr Zhang is clear the recruitment channel of daigou didn’t simply disappear in a vacuum but because the trade became less profitable.

“A brand’s success requires an appropriate pricing structure,” Mr Zhang says.

“If a brand floods the market to further increase top-line sales to the point the retail price on e-commerce channel is lower than the wholesale cost to the recruitment daigou channel – there is no incentive to promote the brand.”

A2 Milk boss David Bortolussi is expecting 2022 sales to be higher than the $NZ1.21 billion achieved in fiscal 2021 – underpinned by China and English label formula growth in the second half. But the company is also having to overcome China’s low birth rate to grow.

Two years ago a2 Milk shares were nearly trading at $20 per share. They are now sitting at about $4.50 each. Since taking the helm in February 2021 Mr Bortolussi moved swiftly to address excess infant milk formula inventory last year.

exclusive deal

I have told Australian Financial Review that daigou channel still plays a critical role in new user acquisition and brand development but hinted that Mr Zhang was unwilling to exclusively commit to deal with a2 Milk – without directly commenting on his allegations.

“During the past year, we have increased our direct engagement with the daigou community, provided more marketing support and seen an increasing number of daigou representing our a2 Platinum brand,” he said.

“Consistent with our growth strategy communicated to the market last year, we are simplifying and delaying our English Label infant milk formula distribution network. In doing so, we are evolving our distribution network towards partners willing to commit to more exclusive, transparent and performance-based arrangements, and we are pleased with progress to date.”

According to Citi analysts consumer preference for domestic brands continues to increase in China and the perception of quality of foreign brands has deteriorated since last year.

But despite a rise in Chinese nationalism, international formula brands are still popular with Chinese mothers. Often local brands can sell for over 500 RMB with hefty 70 per cent plus profit margins, and can be less affordable than imported brands.

“We are seeing on the ground that cost of living is having a material impact on the consumer’s purchase behaviour, particularly after the pandemic,” says one sector source.

Amid COVID-19 restrictions in China, and stock imbalance in the market, Mr Zhang took the opportunity to centralize his businesses through an app “AZ Global” – so his army of recruiters could work from home. He operates like a franchisee system.

the [daigou] channel is the shoe for the brand…. Just because there are shinier and prettier shoes, it doesn’t mean they will fit your feet size.

Wen Jun Zhang

Previously he had merchants buying from Coles and Woolworths, but faced issues with his slew of smaller buyers no longer operating here in Australia due to long-time COVID-19 travel restrictions.

With the consolidation online his recruiters were able to continue to support infant formula brands.

Mr Zhang says he has a proprietary end-to-end technology that supports his business via recruitment channel with detailed data and visibility.

“Without [cost effective] recruitment, it is difficult for an infant formula brand to be sustainable and competitive in China,” he says.

According to Mr Zhang, a “recruiter” is someone who achieves sales despite tough market dynamics, while a “reseller” can only sell when the market demand is strong.

Mr Zhang started his business with just $30,000 in about 2013-2014. He was on the hunt for an infant formula brand to introduce to Chinese parents since Bellamy’s was already more established. About a year later he began working with a2 Milk.

The pair have both gained from the relationship: at its 2019 peak, China contributed to 40 per cent of a2 Milk’s sales.

Mr Zhang grew his business to turnover about $500 million a year and owns 11 warehouses in Australia, New Zealand and greater China.

The a2 Milk board – led by David Hearn – has been concerned about its primary exposure to just one significant customer in China – Mr Zhang. But a2 Milk still reverted to that relationship, which now appears to be irreconcilable.

While Mr Zhang’s relationship with a2 Milk was headed south, his relationship with the smaller rival Bubs Australia was getting stronger.

In March entities associated with his AZ Global penned an equity incentive deal with Bubs.

Mr Zhang says the daigou channel must be respected.

He recalls telling Peter Nathan, the former head of a2 Milk’s China business, that “the channel is the shoe for the brand, the feet. Just because there are shinier and prettier shoes, it doesn’t mean they will fit your feet size. It can cause injuries and doesn’t make you walk or run better”.