Monday, December 12, 2022

 

ATTACKS BY DOGS ON AUSTRALIA POST WORKERS HAVE INCREASED MARKEDLY OVER THE LAST FEW MONTHS

 Why are some dog owners so careless and irresponsible? They are responsible for these attacks, and in this case, they are responsible for the death of a man.

A report by The New Daily says attacks by dogs have been on the increase over the last five months. The latest attack was on an unfortunate electrical contractor who was fatally mauled by two dogs during an horrific attack south of Brisbane earlier this month.

“The two animals, a bandog-bullmastiff cross and a Rhodesian ridgeback cross attacked and killed the contractor after he entered the property to read an electricity meter on December 3.

Australia Post says attacks on workers have increased more than 55 per cent, with an average of almost seven incidents a day since July 2022.”

Postal workers “have been left battered and bleeding, with injuries including puncture wounds, lacerations, scratches and bites.”

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https://thenewdaily.com.au/life/2022/12/12/sharp-increase-in-dog-attacks-on-posties/?breaking_live_scroll=1

Sunday, December 11, 2022

 

Girls now out-performing boys in nearly every HSC subject in NSW




Girls are outperforming boys in most Higher School Certificate subjects and doing almost as well in the historically male strongholds of mathematics and physics, leaving chemistry as one of the few subjects in which the top bands are dominated by boys.

Girls’ particularly strong performance in English renewed concerns about the subject’s mandatory inclusion in students’ Australian Tertiary Admission Rank, amid concerns it disadvantages boys.

Ahead of the release of Higher School Certificate results, NSW Education Standards Authority data from 2019 to 2021, obtained by the Herald, shows the trend of boys falling behind in key areas earlier in high school continues into senior years.

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https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/girls-now-out-performing-boys-in-nearly-every-hsc-subject-20221209-p5c56d.html


 Tree-mendous achievement: Grandfather crosses Australia on foot to restore environment

Richard Van Pijlen has crossed almost all of Australia, one step at a time. Photo: Supplied

After eight months on the road and battling wind, rain, heat and fatigue, a Sydney grandfather will this week reach his Perth destination, having crossed the continent on foot.

Richard van Pijlen, 68, has been pushing his trolley of supplies for more than 4,000 kilometres to raise money so community bush regeneration group Landcare can plant one million trees.

“I didn’t really think things through too much, and just focusing on you know, 30 kilometres and then another 30 kilometres,” he told AAP this week as he began the last 150km of his cross-continent journey.

When AAP first caught up with Mr van Pijlen in May a few weeks after he’d set out, he was expecting to walk around 25km a day.

But on one occasion he reached 85km.

In November, after spending six weeks crossing the vast and arid Nullarbor Plain, the former painter walked 27 hours almost non-stop, resting only to eat.

“I’ve never been as exhausted in my whole life like that moment,” he said.

“You think you have nothing left, but there’s still a little bit left.”

It was soon after that mammoth effort, when he arrived in Norseman in Western Australia, that Mr van Pijlen met local cook Steve Pates.

“I was dumbfounded,” Mr Pates told AAP.

“I went in and cooked him the biggest breakfast I could fit on the plate, and he ate every bit of it.”

Since the pair met, Mr Pates has driven several food packages out to Mr van Pijlen on the road, on one occasion making a 500km round trip to deliver the meals.

“Every time someone stops by and is going to Perth I send him a care package,” Mr Pates said.

“He wants to leave the world a better place … you’ve got to admire the man.”

Mr van Piljen says the people he’s met on his journey have been the highlight of his journey.

During his trek, the Dutch-born Sydneysider celebrated his birthday and became a grandfather for the ninth time.

He told AAP he’s exceptionally proud of raising money and attention for Landcare, a charity he’s passionate about.

But for now, he is focused on reaching Fremantle, south of Perth, and could be there as early as Sunday.

“It has been really challenging because of the heat … around 40 degrees,” he tells AAP.

Mr van Piljen set off from Sydney’s northern beaches on May 2 and when he finally reaches his destination he will rest up and reunite with his partner who’s flying over from NSW.

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https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/people/2022/12/11/green-granddads-transaustralia-stroll/







Behrouz Boochani in Australia: ‘Some of those politicians who barred me are gone. But I am here’

Behrouz Boochani, the Kurdish writer and refugee is in Australia to promote his latest book Freedom, Only Freedom, a collection of work he wrote while in detention, alongside essays from experts on migration, refugee rights, politics and literature.

Boochani was locked up in offshore detention for six years, during which he wrote and published the award-winning No Friend But the Mountains.

He eventually settled in New Zealand.

Boochani fled ethnic persecution in Iran in 2013, attempting to arrive in Australia via boat from Indonesia, before being detained in the Manus Island detention centre.

There Boochani witnessed the “brutal side” of Australia and its politics, and penned his first book via compiled WhatsApp messages.

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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/dec/08/behrouz-boochani-in-australia-some-of-those-politicians-who-barred-me-are-gone-but-i-am-here