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In pictures: Garma Festival was a colorful celebration of cultures

After a three-year hiatus due to COVID, Garma Festival has made a return in the Northern Territory, during a historic weekend.

The event is considered the leading Indigenous cultural exchange event and a national hub for major forums with discussion, policy and action formulation.

The festival brings together Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians through youth forums, art gallery, music, film, song, dance and expo exhibitions.

Take a look at all the color from the weekend below.

Dancers holding sticks with yellow body paint.
Dancers performed to open the festival. (ABC: Michael Franco)
Anthony Albanese in front of Aboriginal performers playing the didgeridoo
The Prime Minister and Galarrwuy Yunupingu enjoyed the opening performance. (ABC: Michael Franco)
Marcia Langton at a podium.
Marcia Langton spoke at a forum on the Friday. (ABC: Michael Franco)
A dancer with white body paint performing
Dancers opened the key forum on Saturday. (ABC: Michael Franco)
Four women standing and a man sitting in front of colorful Yidak didgeridoo.
The Gurruwiwi family are seen with a memorial for old man.(ABC: Michael Franco)
A woman painting a didgeridoo
Jennifer Gurruwiwi painted a yidaki during the festival. (ABC: Michael Franco)
Portrait of a girl with butterfly face paint.
Face and body paint featured throughout the festival. (ABC: Michael Franco)
A band performing on a stage with a poster that says "garma" at the front of the stage.
The main stage saw plenty of performances across the weekend.(ABC: Michael Franco)
A mother and baby with traditional indigenous face painting
Nyassha Horne, and Solman Gurruwiwi, 2, were part of the final ceremony on Sunday.(ABC: Michael Franco )
A group of people dressed in rainbow tie dye dancing
The evening Bunggul had plenty of colour. (ABC: Michael Franco)
A group of people watching performers
Galarrwuy Yunupingu sees off the dancers performing for the evening Bunggul on Sunday. (ABC: Michael Franco)

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Tania Burgess’ killer walks free 17 years after her murder. Her parents of her want his name of her revealed

The teen who stabbed a 15-year-old girl to death as she walked home from school on the NSW Central Coast has walked free nearly 17 years after her murder.

Tania Burgess was stabbed 48 times after she hopped off a school bus and walked through the car park of Forresters Beach Resort on July 19, 2005.

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Now Tania’s family are calling for the identity of their daughter’s killer to be revealed to the public.

The convicted murderer, known to the public only as “DL”, has been in custody since he was 16, and because the offense occurred when he was a minor he cannot be named for legal reasons.

With the killer now aged 32, Tania’s parents believe the suppression of her killer’s name should be lifted in the interest of “public safety”.

Tania’s parents Mandy and Chris Burgess told Sunrise last month they felt frustrated that her killer was to get a second chance at life.

“I felt anger and helplessness because it’s really like riding as a backseat passenger in a car for the last 17 years,” Mandy said.

Tania Burgess was stabbed 48 times after she hopped off a school bus in 2005. Credit: 7NEWS
The convicted murderer, known only as ‘DL’, has been in custody since he was 16. Credit: 7NEWS

“We had this most beautiful 15-year-old daughter, and she was taken away from us and now he gets to have his life back.

“He gets to have a second chance at life, and we can’t do that for Tania.

“She’s not going to get a second chance at life.”

The devastated parents admit they felt “a lot of anger” when seeing their daughter’s killer again in court.

“I was just such a hard thing to do, to see his face again,” Mandy said.

Mandy and Chris have also met with a handful of ministers to discuss the suppression order.

“They’re all very much all about releasing the name because it gives accountability for their crimes,” Chris said.

“And it’s not like they stole a car, they did something significantly more serious, so they should be accountable for their crimes, not just able to hide behind anonymity. “

Tania’s family are calling for an end to the suppression of her murderer’s identity. Credit: 7NEWS

DL was convicted back in 2005 by a jury and was jailed for at least 17 years, with a maximum term of 22 years.

This was reduced on appeal by four years in 2018, meaning he has been eligible for parole since mid-2018.

During a hearing, Justice James Wood accepted the expert advice from the Serious Offenders Review Council that strongly advised DL should be released with supervision before his full-time sentence expired.

“The priority is now supervision to foster his reintegration and the protection of the public,” the council report stated.

DL must provide authorities daily notifications of all his movements and undergo treatment by a forensic psychologist, along with other strict conditions.

-With APA

Engineers use dead spiders as creepy robots.

Engineers use dead spiders as creepy robots.

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Northern Grampians Major Tony Driscoll dies after illness

Senior Grampians Tony Driscoll is being remembered as a ‘wonderful’ community member after he died over the weekend.

Cr Driscoll started his third stint as major of the Northern Grampians Shire Council last year but sadly passed away on Sunday after battling illness.

Fellow councilor Murray Emerson said he was devastated by the news.

“Tony and I first came together about 11 years ago when we joined the Northern Grampians Shire and we instantly took a liking to each other,” Cr Emerson said.

“[It] It wasn’t hard to get along with Tony Driscoll, he was a person who was very easy to become a friend with.”

Cr Driscoll represented the Kara Kara ward, taking in St Arnaud, since October 2012 and remained active with the council until his death.

He has served as major three times, with his most recent appointment beginning in November 2021.

Cr Driscoll was also the oldest from 2016 to 2017 and from 2017 to 2018.

A group photo of six men and one woman in business attire in front of a large wooden door and orange walls.  All are smiling.
Murray Emerson (far left) says Tony Driscoll (far right) played a key role in major council projects and helped secure government funding.(Supplied: Northern Grampians Shire Council)

Leader who fought for region

In council statement, his colleagues remembered Cr Driscoll for his dedication, integrity and as “a passionate advocate for his community”.

Cr Emerson said Cr Driscoll campaigned the state government for funding for major projects like the Grampians Peaks Trail, the Underground Physics Laboratory, and was involved in their decision-making.

“Tony was part and parcel of all of that and he just had that way about him, that he could get people to agree with some of our requests,” Cr Emerson said.

“Tony had a lot of sayings, some of them that I could quote and some I couldn’t, but Tony was just easy to get along with.

“He was a wonderful person, he was a wonderful councillor, and he was a great mate.

“He’d been sick for a little while but you never expect this sort of thing to happen.”

Flags at Stawell Town Hall in Stawell and St Arnaud would be flown at half-mast and council meetings postponed until August 15 while councilors respected a period of mourning.

Cr Driscoll is survived by his wife Annette, two sons, two daughters and his grandchildren.

4 people, two with hats, one with a blue plaid shirt hold their framed awards, while 4 men and woman (councillors) stand behind
Tony Driscoll (back left) is remembered for being a proactive advocate for the community.(Supplied: Northern Grampians Shire Council)

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The trend sparking optimism among epidemiologists

Dr Robert Moss, a University of Melbourne epidemiologist within the Victorian government’s epidemic-tracking team, said: “It does look as though BA.5 may have peaked in a number of states. It’s a little earlier than we might have expected.”

However, I have added that the stress on hospitals “could remain uncomfortably high for a while yet”.

BA.5 is a subvariant of Omicron, which caused a huge spike in cases in January.

This version of the virus is particularly good at evading the antibody protection generated by vaccines or infection. At the same time, vaccine protection has been waning, with only 71.3 per cent of Australians over 16 having had a booster shot.

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While McCaw fears the worst may be to come for hospitals, other epidemiologists noted the number of people needing a bed was falling in several states.

Dr Romain Ragonnet, part of Monash University’s epidemiology team, said: “I am quite confident that our hospital system has now passed its most testing times. We seem to have passed the flu peak and we are approaching warmer days.”

Unlike earlier in the pandemic, authorities no longer have a firm grip on how much virus is in the community, as many people are either not getting tested or not reporting test results. Victorian authorities have said they suspect about half of new cases are being missed.

Rather than just looking at daily cases, some epidemiologists are now focusing on the total percentage of positive tests to track the virus.

In Victoria, that rate peaked in the first week of July and has since fallen slightly, while it has fluctuated in NSW.

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“New cases have flattened out and are now likely to decline in the majority of states, and we’re not seeing any rises in PCR-positive percentage,” said Associate Professor James Wood, a disease modeller at the University of NSW who provides data to state governments. “So that trend is realistic.”

University of Melbourne epidemiologist Professor Tony Blakely came to the same conclusion, pointing to falling hospitalization rates across the country as evidence that the surge is past its peak.

Blakely said BA.5 may continue to circulate, causing smaller waves as immunity from the vaccine wanes, or another variant may emerge and become dominant, leading to a new, larger wave.

“What happens beyond this wave? No one really knows,” he said.

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ICAC says pork barreling could amount to criminal corruption

The ICAC was originally investigating the Stronger Communities Fund but, following several government inquiries and a review of grants administration announced by Premier Dominic Perrottet, pivoted to a broader probe of whether pork barreling could be considered corrupt.

The grants review, prepared by Perrottet’s department and the Productivity Commission and made public in April, recommended a new set of guidelines that would apply to ministers, staff and public servants, and included some mandatory rules about transparency and accountability.

But the ICAC called this an “unacceptable” half-measure, “the legal effect of which is uncertain”. It would also limit the ICAC’s capacity to make findings of corrupt conduct about any breaches.

Instead, the commission recommended that all rules about grant programs should be statutory regulations. The ministerial code of conduct should also be amended to include a clause that explicitly forbids the minister from approving expenditure unless they are satisfied it is “efficient, effective, economical and ethical” – similar to a clause present in Commonwealth laws.

The report said the nature and seriousness of any alleged pork barreling would depend on the purpose of the program or statute under which the money was spent, and this would need to be determined on a case-by-case basis. The more specific and technical the assessment criteria of a grant program, the less room there is to play politics.

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While ministers had broader scope to involve political factors when they exercised ministerial discretion, “such power cannot be exercised to achieve an objective that is extraneous to, or inconsistent with, the public purpose for which the executive power exists”, the ICAC said.

Shadow special minister of state John Graham welcomed the report and called on the Perrottet government to support Labor’s legislation on grants reform. “Ministers do not have unfettered power to give grants, but at times in NSW they behave as if they do,” he said.

A spokesman for the Premier said the would consider the ICAC’s report and had already accepted all the recommendations from the aforementioned government review of grants administration received in April.

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Mystery deepens over Saudi sisters’ deaths

Their reluctance to speak to authorities or even open their front door concerned workers and managers in their building enough to call police officers to perform a welfare check in March. They said, “no we’re alright,” and that they did not need help, one witness said.

However, they “looked pretty timid and upset, scared for whatever reason,” the witness said.

The sisters’ decomposing bodies were found in separate bedrooms in their small flat when the sheriff attended to query their failure to pay rent in early June. Their bodies lay undiscovered for a month in a block of 200 apartments beside one of the busiest roads in south-west Sydney.

Reports in Middle Eastern news outlets, which were widely re-reported in Australia at the weekend, said that the sisters were known as Reem and Rawan and fled to Hong Kong while on a family holiday with $5000.

However, the reports appear to have confirmed the Alsehlis’ escape with a separate case.

Another set of sisters who used the names Reem and Rawan were famously detained in Hong Kong in 2018 at the request of Saudi authorities after renouncing Islam and fleeing their family while on holiday with $5000 they had secretly saved.

Contacts of those sisters confirmed to the herald that they were alive and well in an undisclosed country.

Like many women who leave Saudi Arabia, Reem and Rawan fled because of abuse by their male relatives. Police said they were in contact with the Alsehli sisters’ family, and there was “nothing to suggest” the women’s relatives were suspects.

A police source did confirm that the women’s family did not want to publicly issue photographs, but the coroner ordered their release to encourage members of the community to come forward with information that might help the investigation.

Another person with knowledge of the case, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the sisters had traveled to Australia through Jordan and Dubai. Police have been tight-lipped about their movements and visa status.

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The case has echoes of one in New York, in which the bodies of two Saudi sisters – who were seeking asylum – were found next to the Hudson River, bound together with duct tape by the wrists and ankles. There were no signs of trauma.

Their deaths were ruled a suicide, New York Times reported.

The coroner will decide whether to hold an inquiry once they have reviewed the police evidence and the autopsy results.

with Maher Mughrabi

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‘Put your masks on’: Independent MP Monique Ryan blasts LNP members in question time for not wearing masks

The Independent MP for Kooyong has blasted LNP members in Question Time for not wearing a mask.

Dr Monique Ryan told the members of the Coalition to “put your masks on” after she was interrupted during Parliament while discussing the burden of COVID-19 reinfection rates on the health care system.

“COVID-19 infections in this country are at a record high and increasing,” the former pediatric neurologist said while posing her question to Health Minister Mark Butler.

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“There is an increasing risk of cumulative neurological and cardiovascular disease from infections from COVID-19.

“Can the Minister please explain how he proposes to manage the oncoming national significant burden of disability and chronic illness from repeated infection?”

During her question, Dr Ryan was jeered at by some MPs, before snapping back “put your masks on” as she pointed at the opposition benches.

The Member for Kooyong later took to Twitter later saying: “I don’t appreciate being interrupted while speaking on serious risks of repeated COVID infections.”

“I particularly don’t appreciate being interrupted by shouting LNP MPs who refuse to wear masks.

“We all have a duty to look after each other. Here & everywhere. Put your mask on!”

Mask-wearing is only a recommendation inside Parliament and most Coalition MPs exercise their free choice not to wear one, despite a few exceptions.

The former Melbourne Royal Children’s Hospital Neurology department Director was one of a slate of Climate 200-backed independents who toppled sitting Liberal MPs at the last election including the then-treasurer Josh Frydenberg who was seen as a future leader of the party.

Mr Frydenberg’s campaign spent an estimated more than $2 million to hold the seat which was once considered one of the jewels in the Liberal Party crown.

But Dr Ryan’s strong grass roots campaign targeting more ambitious action on climate change and greater integrity in politics, along with the personal unpopularity of then-prime minister Scott Morrison, delivered the independent a historic win.

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ABC appoints former Coalition media adviser Fiona Cameron as ombudsman | Australian Broadcasting Corporation

The board of the ABC has appointed media executive and former Coalition adviser Fiona Cameron to the newly created role of ABC ombudsman.

The new role was recommended by an independent review that found the public broadcaster’s internal complaints unit was “efficient” but could benefit from the addition of someone to handle appeals and reviews.

The ABC commissioned the former commonwealth ombudsman John McMillan and the former SBS and Ten news chief Jim Carroll to conduct the review last year. This came after high-profile complaints about television programs Exposed: The Ghost Train Fire, Ms Represented, Inside the Canberra Bubble on Four Corners and Q+A’s Trauma and Truth Telling.

Cameron will head an expanded ABC editorial complaints unit and will have the power to review a complaint finding. The ombudsman will report to the board, not the managing director.

Cameron’s most recent role was as an authority member at the Australian Communications and Media Authority (Acma), and she was previously chief operating officer at Screen Australia for a decade.

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She was previously chief of staff and media adviser to the former communications minister Richard Alston, a strong critic of the ABC.

Jonathan Holmes, a former ABC journalist, has warned that keeping the ombudsman separate from editorial management by having them report to the board and not the managing director is highly unusual.

Ita Buttrose, chair of the ABC, says the new ombudsman role will help strengthen the existing complaints handling processes.

“We already have the highest standards of complaints handling in place of any Australian media organization and Fiona’s appointment will assist us in maintaining those standards,” Buttrose said.

The ABC’s managing director, David Anderson, said Cameron’s appointment will help the broadcaster maintain the strong bond of trust and confidence with audiences.

“The ABC Ombudsman will be key to us maintaining the high standards Australians know and expect from the ABC,” Anderson said.

Cameron said: “This is an important and challenging role and strengthens the ABC’s commitment to its audience. I look forward to getting my feet under the desk and grappling with all the many and varied issues.”

The ombudsman role is in addition to the existing two-tier model of in-house complaints handling and external review by the media watchdog, the Acma.

The complaints review was commissioned by the ABC board in October 2021.

Shortly after the review was announced, the ABC’s five-person complaints unit was targeted by the Liberal senator Andrew Bragg, who attempted to establish a government-led inquiry. That move was labeled “political interference” by Buttrose, and was voted down by Labor and the Greens in the Senate.

“The ABC gets to mark its own homework and as an organization paid for by the taxpayer, I believe there should be extra scrutiny,” Bragg told Sky News last year.

Cameron will start in late September.

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Aboriginal staff laid off, youth left in limbo as ‘inspirational’ center abruptly closed

Young Aboriginal staff are being offered “small amounts” of money to leave their roles quietly, after a decision by owners to shut down operations at Redfern’s National Center of Indigenous Excellence.

The property, which has operated on George Street for 16 years, is currently owned by the NSW Aboriginal Land Council (NSWALC) after it was transferred from the Commonwealth’s Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation (ILSC) on June 30. The ILSC is still in charge of running operations at the site.

Services at the fitness and aquatic centers are set to stop on the 8th of August, with all staff notified on Monday morning.

Former NRL star Dean Widders told NITV News he got an anxious phone call from his son, Dean Jnr, an employee of the Centre, after he received the news.

“He just got called into a meeting without any notice, any explanation, to say that his job is going to be gone in five days and he’s not gonna have any work. He has to find out how he’s going to survive for the next few months,” he said.

Speaking from outside the Centre, Widders described how busloads of children were turning up to the NCIE for their afternoon programs only to be met with locked gates.

“Their hearts are broken,” he said.

It’s not just about paychecks, it’s a place of inspiration and building aspirations.

“Changing the ripple effect of how this community works in a positive direction. That’s the big loss out of this.”

NCIE youth

Gomeroi and Wiradjuri woman Margaret Haumono, co-founder and CEO of non for profit Redfern Youth Connect, posted a video on the group’s Instagram page from the scene.

“A lot of the young Aboriginal kids were quite distressed this morning,” she told NITV News.

“They’ve been told to sign non-disclosure agreements. They’ve also been given a small amount to actually be redundant from their jobs as well. And I was quite distressing to walk into that.”

Dean Widders said a parting offer of $500 was a slap in the face for his son.

“That was to say ‘keep your mouth shut, go away silently’. That was a bit of an insult to him, to say this is what your livelihood is worth,” he said.

Natascha Haupt, who works admin at NCIE, said not one member of staff was aware of the shutdown.

“There was no community consultation, no talks with anyone about this. It’s disrespectful,” she told NITV News.

“They’re basically closing down the centre, they gave us a letter that was stating the money they would give us depending on our salary, how long we’ve been there, how many hours we did – paying us out basically.

“But it isn’t enough to survive. One of the boys would get $700, that won’t even make the next rent.”

NCIE

‘They’ve insulted us’

Prominent Redfern community man Shane Phillips, who is a regular user of the Center and has been invested since its inception, said he was devastated by the news.

“It took us from, and I know this sounds bad, but it took us from getting on the charge and the streets being all over the place to a place where we could see our own strength,” he told NITV News.

“There are Elders there and there are families and I am gutted myself. If they stopped this now, without thinking about this properly, I can’t even imagine some of the crazy shit that could happen here.”

Mr Phillips said the communication from the ILSC has been “really poor” throughout the process and that community members felt “insulted.”

“They’re not interested in that social cost and the benefits of it… they’re just all about the numbers and I’m really saddened,” he said.

“They just thought it was beyond our people to be able to think about a model that could work socially and commercially. And that is how they’ve insulted us.”

Shane Phillips

‘Worked together in good faith’: ILSC & NSWALC

Ms Haumono said it was a surprise following a meeting with the NSWALC on Tuesday.

“They assured us there would be a three-year waiting process and then an EOI would go out for the fitness and aquatic center and the community would get the first option at the tender,” she said.

“This completely came out of the blue.”

In a statement, the NSWALC said they will be seeking new management for the centre.

“We will be opening a process to secure a suitable third-party to manage the fitness and aquatic center on the site,” said NSWALC’s Chairperson Danny Chapman.

“The process will be open to both community and industry to apply.”

Today’s events come after both ILSC and NSWALC could not come to negotiate a mutual agreement about the business.

Both ILSC CEO Joseph Morrison and NSWALC CEO Yuseph Deen said, in a joint statement, that both organizations “worked together in good faith” to try and secure NCIE’s future.

“Unfortunately, we have not been able to reach agreement on terms for ongoing support of the organization and as a result, it will close. We are disappointed by the outcome and will work to support affected staff and community.”

NCIE

‘We will fight’

For one of the young people outside of NCIE this afternoon, today signals the end of a long journey.

“I’ve been here for about half my life, since I was nine-years-old,” they said.

“I’ve been coming here every single day after school, so it’s going to be a big change.

Saying that NCIE was a “safe place” for them and their friends to come together, the youth told NITV News that things won’t be the same in the suburb if the space changed.

“I feel like this is kind of like a special spot for us because it’s somewhere can just come,” they said.

“It’s a place that we all rely on, like something we can always go back to. So, just like can’t even imagine the notion of it not being there anymore.”

Shane Phillips and members of the community have planned to turn up again on Tuesday at 1pm to protest.

“I will shackle myself to that fence. If they try and go do it the wrong way without the community being involved,” he said.

“Let them see what happens this time we will fight hard.”

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Perth and WA weather: Bureau of Meteorology issues warning as second front set to bring monster swell

West Aussies are being told to brace for a second cold front with swell heights forecast to hit a two-year record and up to 51mm of rain falling in the wettest part of the State.

The Bureau of Meteorology has issued a severe weather warning for the southern part of WA, including the regions surrounding Perth, Mandurah the South West, Katanning, Manjimup, Merredin, Mount Barker and Northam.

Heavy rains and damaging wind likes are being forecast — and it isn’t expected to subside for at least another two days.

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“A second front will move across the coast later this week, prolonging the severe weather conditions in WA through to Wednesday,” the Bureau said.

Pictures of wet weather in Perth.  Pictures on St Georges Terrace in Perth.
Camera IconPerth has been smashed by heavy rains and wild winds. Credit: ross swanborough/The West Australian

By 5pm Monday, State Emergency Services volunteers had been bombarded with calls from distressed residents struggling with leaking roofs and flooding.

Walpole, in the State’s South West, was the wettest region of WA with a whopping 51mm of rain in the gauge over the past two days.

In Perth, the hills suburb of Bickley received the most rain on Monday, recording 30.6mm by 6pm.

Pictures of wet weather in Perth.  Pictures on Riverside Drive in Perth.
Camera IconRoads were waterlogged in the Perth CBD on Monday. Credit: ross swanborough/The West Australian

The coast also got a battering, with 22.2mm falling in the Swanbourne rain gauge and 89km/h wind gusts recorded at 4.12pm.

Wind gusts have been relentless across WA with 90km to 100km winds recorded at Cape Naturaliste, while Geraldton Airport recorded 87km/h winds.

And while surfers are being told to stay away from the water during the weather warning, the swell is rapidly rising.

Wet weather hits the Perth metro area on 1 Aug, 2022.
Camera IconHuge swell is being forecast for the Perth coast this week. Credit: matt jelonek/The West Australian

On Rottnest Island, an enormous swell height of 9.5m is being forecast — the biggest in more than two years — and monster wave heights are expected in other areas too.

“Significant wave heights exceeding 7 meters are expected in exposed locations. Waves will arrive from West to South Westerly directions,” the Bureau said.

The wild weather has prompted the RSPCA to issue a warning to pet owners to comfort their animals.

Pictures of wet weather in Perth.  Pictures on St Georges Terrace in Perth.
Camera IconCommuters were hit by wet conditions on Monday. Credit: ross swanborough/The West Australian

“The winter months can put pets at risk, but luckily there are simple steps we can take to prepare, and make sure our animals stay warm and protected from the wind, rain and cold,” she said.

“Cold and wet weather conditions bring a new influence of cruelty reports to our Inspectorate.

“Last winter, RSPCA WA received over 1500 reports, with common issues being insufficient food, water and shelter, abandonment, and animals in need of vet treatment.

“Protecting your pet this winter could be as simple as providing some extra bedding, food, and somewhere warm and dry for them to escape.”

PERTH WEATHER FORECAST

  • monday – 20C – Showers, possible afternoon storm, 15-20mm
  • tuesday – 10-16C – Showers. Becoming windy, 10-15mm
  • wednesday – 9-16C – Rain, becoming windy, 15-25mm
  • thursday – 10-17C – Showers easing, 3-6mm
  • friday – 7-16C – Shower or two, 0-1mm

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