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Tactical police have shot man during siege at a Sydney caravan park
Tactical police have shot man during siege at a Sydney caravan park

News.com.au

time2 days ago

  • News.com.au

Tactical police have shot man during siege at a Sydney caravan park

Police have shot a man who allegedly lunged at them with a knife during a siege in a caravan park in southwestern Sydney. Police were called to a caravan park in Elderslie, in the Macarthur region, just after lunchtime on Thursday. NSW Police said in a statement the man was 'armed with a knife and made threats to self-harm.' 'Specialist resources attended to assist, and negotiators attempted to speak to the man who refused to co-operate,' the statement said. 'Just before 3.30pm, officers attached to the Tactical Operations Unit gained entry to the premises and the armed man rushed at officers with the knife. 'Police discharged a taser and less than lethal tactical rounds which were ineffective before the man was shot.' Police had locked down the area and refused to let locals back into the park as the situation developed. In footage obtained by 10 News, an officer in tactical gear can be seen pointing a rifle at somebody off-screen before three loud, sharp cracks are heard. The 52-year-old man was immediately treated by NSW Ambulance paramedics on scene and taken to Liverpool Hospital in a critical condition. He was reportedly shot at least three times, once in the arm, once in the leg and once in the abdomen. A witness at the scene said he was addressed by two 'heavily fortified police officers'. 'There was about eight of them all up and they weren't messing around. They had the full riot gear on, ready to go.' A critical incident team from State Crime Command's Homicide Squad will lead the investigation into the circumstances surrounding the incident. The investigation will be reviewed by the Professional Standards Command and oversighted by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission (LECC).

2025 Peter Mulholland Cup live stream: St Gregory's College v Hills Sports High
2025 Peter Mulholland Cup live stream: St Gregory's College v Hills Sports High

Daily Telegraph

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • Daily Telegraph

2025 Peter Mulholland Cup live stream: St Gregory's College v Hills Sports High

Don't miss out on the headlines from Rugby League Live Stream. Followed categories will be added to My News. When St Gregory's College coach Tom Morrison calls bullocking lock Lorima Cosgrave a Mack truck, he means it. He still has the tyre mark down his chest to prove it. Coming head-to-head with his young charge in a local seniors game, Morrison got a first hand insight of what other front rowers across the Peter Mulholland Cup have had to deal with this season. It is a raw power he wants to see again when the proud Campbelltown nursery hosts Hills Sports High on Tuesday. The clash will be exclusively live streamed FREE on KommunityTV. Lorima Cosgrave in action for the Western Suburbs Magpies in the SG Ball Cup. Picture Warren Gannon Photography 'He is a Mack truck, once he gets going he is very hard to knock off centre,' Morrison said. 'He played some games in the seniors for Campbelltown City and he scored a good try in the game against us. He made half a break and I came across thinking I could make a cover tackle on him. 'He stomped me into the turf and kept on running to the tryline. 'He is a classy player, but I keep trying to tell him he isn't a dummy-half anymore, he's a middle forward out and out.' The lock is one of several players in an undersized engine room which has continued to punch above its weight in 2025. Ryan Mackander in action for the Macarthur Tigers in the Laurie Daley Cup. Picture Warren Gannon Photography Front rower Ryan Mackander has been phenomenal for the school, while Jake Gaffney has shown he isn't afraid to hold the gloves up against bigger opposition packs. With two wins from two games, St Gregory's have already punched their ticket to the finals series, putting last year's anguish of missing play-offs by a mere two points on for-and-against. While the result of their contest against Hills Sports High doesn't matter in the grand scheme of the season, for Morrison a win is almost critical. 'We want to play well at our school and put on a show for the school,' he said. 'A lot of teams really enjoy their home field advantage, but we haven't had that in recent years. We have really struggled for results there, so we want to give them something to cheer.' It will be a final run out for Hills Sports High who are not able to qualify for the finals after losing their opening two matches of the season. Originally published as 2025 Peter Mulholland Cup live stream: St Gregory's College v Hills Sports High

Australian Labor considers new tax measures affecting many citizens
Australian Labor considers new tax measures affecting many citizens

Daily Mail​

time30-05-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Australian Labor considers new tax measures affecting many citizens

A Labor MP has issued a call for a new tax on sugary drinks such as Coke, fruit juices and sports drinks - a year after a controversial national inquiry into the diabetes epidemic recommended the levy. Dr Mike Freelander, MP for the federal seat of Macarthur on Sydney's south-western edge, told Daily Mail Australia this week that he supports a levy on sugar-sweetened beverages. Dr Freelander, a medically-trained doctor, called on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to support a proposal, pushed by a parliamentary inquiry he chaired, to force beverage producers to make healthier drinks. The 20 per cent tax would also raise an additional $1.4billion of government revenue over four years - coming at a time where tobacco excise collection dropped almost $5billion this financial year. 'The levy is a way to encourage manufacturers to reduce sugar content in their products and there is increasing global evidence of the benefits on community health and wellbeing,' said Dr Freelander, a backbencher. Sugar-sweetened beverages are defined as water-based drinks with added caloric sweeteners such as sucrose, high-fructose corn syrup, or fruit juice concentrate. The tax would include soft drinks, sports drinks, fruit drinks, energy drinks, cordials and drinks made with added fruit juice concentrate. A number of Coalition members of the diabetes inquiry committee opposed the introduction of a levy in the final report. Deputy chair of the committee Julian Leeser (pictured), Liberal MP for Berowra, said the tax would disproportionately fall upon Australia's lowest earners. 'People are doing it tough and struggling to pay bills and put food on the table,' he told the Sydney Morning Herald last year. 'There's also a real issue about whether a sugar tax would change behaviour.' Dr Freelander's (pictured)comments come as a new study showed public support for a sugar tax. The study was published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health on Wednesday and led by professor Caroline Miller, president of the Public Health Association of Australia (PHAA). More than half (56 per cent) of the study's 1800 respondents supported a health levy tax on sugary drinks in line earlier research from 2017. Dr Miller said sugary drinks were a significant contributor to obesity - a disease which has overtaken cancer as the leading cause of Australia's preventable disease burden. She said Australia is facing a serious public health issue, one that warrants a policy approach defined by 'strong leadership'. Critics of the sugar tax claim dietary choices should be left to the individual and that lower-earning Australians would be hardest hit by the levy. The Australian Beverages Council has led the opposition against the sugary drinks tax - claiming declining consumption rates suggested something else was to blame. 'The tax is a misguided attempt to address a complex problem like obesity that lacks real world evidence it has any discernible impact on weight,' Geoff Parker, chief executive of the Council said in a statement last year. 'Consumption of sugar from drinks in Australia has decreased significantly over the last 20 years at the same time overweight, obesity and diabetes rates have continued to rise. Clearly soft drinks aren't driving the nation's expanding waistline which makes this call for a tax illogical and clearly just a revenue raiser for public health groups.' Sugar taxes are already in place in a number of European and American countries including the UK, France, Norway, Mexico and Chile. One study suggested the daily sugar intake of UK children fell by five grams within a year of the tax being introduced in 2018, while adults cut their intake by 11 grams. But chief executive of the PHAA Terry Slevin said the study proved there was 'genuine community concern about unhealthy drinks'. 'Health Minister Mark Butler and the Albanese government have implemented strong and effective measures to curb smoking and vaping, we believe similarly decisive action is needed to tackle obesity. 'We know what needs to be done, now is the time to do it.' The Australian Medical Association, the peak representative body for doctors in Australia, advocates for a tax of $0.40 per 100 grams of sugar.

EXCLUSIVE Fresh Labor push for a new that will impact every Australian: What it means for you
EXCLUSIVE Fresh Labor push for a new that will impact every Australian: What it means for you

Daily Mail​

time30-05-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Fresh Labor push for a new that will impact every Australian: What it means for you

A Labor MP has issued a call for a new tax on sugary drinks such as Coke, fruit juices and sports drinks - a year after a controversial national inquiry into the diabetes epidemic recommended the levy. Dr Mike Freelander, MP for the federal seat of Macarthur on Sydney 's south-western edge, told Daily Mail Australia this week that he supports a levy on sugar-sweetened beverages. Dr Freelander, a medically-trained doctor, called on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to support a proposal, pushed by a parliamentary inquiry he chaired, to force beverage producers to make healthier drinks. The tax would also raise an additional $1.4billion of government revenue over four years - coming at a time where tobacco excise collection dropped almost $5billion this financial year. 'The levy is a way to encourage manufacturers to reduce sugar content in their products and there is increasing global evidence of the benefits on community health and wellbeing,' said Dr Freelander, a backbencher. According to the report he still supports, sugar-sweetened beverages are defined as water-based drinks with added caloric sweeteners - such as sucrose, high-fructose corn syrup, or fruit juice concentrate. This the tax would include soft drinks, sports drinks, fruit drinks, energy drinks, cordials and drinks made with added fruit juice concentrate. A number of Coalition members of the diabetes inquiry committee opposed the introduction of a levy in the final report. Deputy chair of the committee Julian Leeser, Liberal MP for Berowra, said the impost of the tax would disproportionately fall upon Australia's lowest earners. 'People are doing it tough and struggling to pay bills and put food on the table,' he told the Sydney Morning Herald last year. 'There's also a real issue about whether a sugar tax would change behaviour.' Dr Freelander's comments come as a new study showed public support for a sugar tax, despite criticism that it could disproportionately affect low-income Australians. The study was published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health on Wednesday and led by professor Caroline Miller, president of the Public Health Association of Australia (PHAA). More than half (56 per cent) of the study's 1800 respondents supported a health levy tax on sugary drinks in line earlier research from 2017. Dr Miller said sugary drinks were a significant contributor to obesity - a disease which has overtaken cancer as the leading cause of Australia's preventable disease burden. She said Australia is facing a serious public health issue, one that warrants a policy approach defined by 'strong leadership'. Critics of the sugar tax claim dietary choices should be left to the individual and that lower-earning Australians would be hardest hit by the levy. The Australian Beverages Council has led the opposition against the sugary drinks tax - claiming declining consumption rates suggested something else was to blame. 'The tax is a misguided attempt to address a complex problem like obesity that lacks real world evidence it has any discernible impact on weight,' Geoff Parker, chief executive of the Council said in a statement last year. 'Consumption of sugar from drinks in Australia has decreased significantly over the last 20 years at the same time overweight, obesity and diabetes rates have continued to rise. 'Clearly soft drinks aren't driving the nation's expanding waistline which makes this call for a tax illogical and clearly just a revenue raiser for public health groups.' Sugar taxes are already in place in a number of European and American countries including the UK, France, Norway, Mexico and Chile. One study suggested the daily sugar intake of UK children fell by five grams within a year of the tax being introduced in 2018, while adults cut their intake by 11 grams. But chief executive of the PHAA Terry Slevin said the study proved there was 'genuine community concern about unhealthy drinks'. 'Minister Mark Butler and the Albanese government have implemented strong and effective measures to curb smoking and vaping, we believe similarly decisive action is needed to tackle obesity.' 'We know what needs to be done, now is the time to do it.' The Australian Medical Association, the peak representative body for doctors in Australia, advocates for a tax of $0.40 per 100 grams of sugar.

BREAKING NEWS Thousands of Aussies rocked by magnitude 3.5 earthquake as shockwaves felt in regional town
BREAKING NEWS Thousands of Aussies rocked by magnitude 3.5 earthquake as shockwaves felt in regional town

Daily Mail​

time28-05-2025

  • Climate
  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Thousands of Aussies rocked by magnitude 3.5 earthquake as shockwaves felt in regional town

A 3.5 magnitude earthquake has struck near a regional town in New South Wales. The quake struck at a depth of 2km near Appin, about 70km southwest of Sydney 's CBD in the Macarthur region, just before 3pm on Wednesday. 'Felt it and heard it - Mount Annan. Split second and internet and computer shut off and off,' one woman wrote online. 'Just felt this! Parked waiting for school pick up and originally thought someone had hit my car due to how much it shook,' a second said. More to come.

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