Aviation expert says quick-turnaround helicopter rides may be reconsidered after Gold Coast crash

Neil Hansford says operators around Australia face pressures after a fall in patronage during pandemic

Investigators will likely examine the number of helicopter joyrides operating at Sea World after a mid-air collision killed four people, an expert says.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) is investigating the cause of the crash which occurred when one helicopter was landing and the other had taken off at the Gold Coast theme park on Monday afternoon.

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Irish man charged with smuggling cocaine to Australia internally in Kinder Surprise capsules

Federal police warn ‘smuggling drugs internally is idiotic’ after man, 28, charged with importing 120g of cocaine into Melbourne airport

An Irish man is behind bars after he was stopped at Melbourne airport and taken to hospital for a CT scan which allegedly revealed six Kinder Surprise capsules packed with cocaine.

The passenger’s bags were searched at the international airport in late December with Australian Border Force alleging there was a positive result for the presence of cocaine.

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Cow rescued from Sydney shopping centre one day, pulled from dam after getting bogged the next

Lost animal was moved to a nearby paddock where it got stuck up to its stomach in mud overnight and had to be lassoed with firefighters’ hose

A cow found wandering a shopping centre has required rescue for a second time.

The lost animal was first discovered in the Caddens Corner shopping precinct in Sydney’s west on Tuesday night.

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Man charged with murder and breaching an AVO after partner found dead in Ballina

The woman’s body was found after the man, 66, walked into a police station on the NSW north coast and reported concern for her welfare

A man has been charged after the body of a woman in her 60s was found on the NSW north coast.

The body was found after the man, 66, walked into Ballina police station about 12.30am on Wednesday and reported concern for the woman’s welfare.

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Fears for remote WA towns as Fitzroy River records one of highest flow rates in Australia

Amount of water surging down river in one day equivalent to what Perth uses in 20 years, Bureau of Meteorology says

Kimberley residents are worried they could run out of food and fuel as a once-in-a-century flood isolates remote towns in Western Australia’s far north, with authorities saying the Fitzroy River is experiencing “one of the highest flow rates ever seen” in Australia.

Fitzroy Crossing, Broome and other towns were expected to be cut off as the waters rose.

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Father drowns while trying to save teenage daughter off NSW beach

Death at Black Head south of Port Macquarie comes after off-duty police officer died when rescuing his teenage son on state’s South Coast

A man has died while trying to save his teenage daughter who was caught in a rip at a beach on the New South Wales mid-north coast.

Police said the 42-year-old man entered the water after his daughter got into trouble at Back beach at Black Head, 75km south of Port Macquarie. He too was caught in the rip on Tuesday afternoon.

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WA government declares emergency as record flood hits Kimberley

Fitzroy River expected to peak 1.5 metres higher than previous record as ex-tropical Cyclone Ellie brings heavy rain and damaging winds across the region

A record flood has hit Western Australia’s Kimberley region as ex-tropical Cyclone Ellie passes through the region.

The Fitzroy River was above 15 metres on Tuesday morning and was projected to reach 15.6 metres on Tuesday night – 1.5 metres higher than the previous record.

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Two Britons among four killed in helicopter collision in Australia

Mid-air collision near Sea World on the Gold Coast also left three people critically injured

Two British people were among four killed after two helicopters collided in mid-air near a marine theme park on Australia’s Gold Coast, it has been confirmed.

A UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) spokesperson said: “We are supporting the family of two British nationals who died in Australia and are in contact with the local authorities.”

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Covid testing for China travellers ‘not an especially onerous requirement’, Chalmers says – as it happened

Opposition calls on government to explain decision to implement restrictions on travellers arriving from China. This blog is now closed

China travel situation the ‘first test of the Albanese government’, Liberal MP says

The shadow assistant minister for mental health, Melissa McIntosh, is among those from the Coalition criticising Labor’s decision not to follow health advice on imposing conditions on travel from China.

The Coalition always supports the best interests of Australians and the safety of Australians ... Now I think this is really the first test of the Albanese government when it comes to pandemic management.

And it’s quite perplexing that on New Year’s Eve, the chief medical officer, Paul Kelly, sent a letter to the health minister, Mark Butler, stating he did not feel these restrictions on Chinese travellers were really required. And then a day later, the health minister has gone against the health advice, of the chief medical officer of this country, and imposed those restrictions. I think Australians very much deserve answers when it comes to the government’s decision, why did the government go against the chief medical officer’s advice and what’s the plan now they’ve implemented these restrictions?

One of the reasons why Australia got through the pandemic as one of the best countries in the world to do so was because we followed Australia’s medical advice. Australia’s medical advice. Not following other countries.

I think it’s really important we’re consistent in what we do as a nation ... when it comes to following the advice. And as I said, this is really a first test of the Albanese government. It’s leading people to be confused. Why would you have the chief medical officer say one thing, and the government ignore that, and do another?

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Sydney man charged after allegedly trying to murder partner with large knife

Woman, 54, is in hospital in a serious condition after her throat was allegedly cut at Fairfield home

A Sydney man will remain in custody for at least two weeks after allegedly trying to murder his partner with a large knife.

Nazar Younan, 57, was arrested on Monday morning after police allege he cut the throat of his partner, aged 54, in their Fairfield home.

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Daniel Andrews and Dominic Perrottet call for reforms to Australia’s ‘broken’ primary care system

Victorian premier says state-run hospitals should not be acting as safety nets because people ‘cannot find a bulk-billing doctor’

Victorian and New South Wales have banded together to ramp up pressure on the federal government to overhaul Australia’s ailing primary care network through national cabinet this year.

Visiting a newly opened urgent primary care clinic in Melbourne, the Victorian premier, Daniel Andrews, said state-run hospitals were too often acting as a safety net amid an ongoing shortage of bulk-billing general practitioners.

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Record falls for Sydney and Melbourne housing in 2022 – but prices remain above pre-Covid levels

Rents increased by 10.2% nationally, CoreLogic says, despite the decline in home prices

Sydney, Melbourne and Hobart posted record annual falls in property prices in 2022 as higher interest rates sapped demand and amounted to the largest national decline since the global financial crisis, industry analysts say.

However, rent increases were “virtually off the charts” rising an average of 10.2% nationally.

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Migration to Australia set to rebound to pre-pandemic levels, report finds

Covid travel restrictions resulted in 85,000 fewer people migrating to Australia in 2020-21, the first net loss since the second world war

Australia has lost 473,000 potential migrants as a result of Covid, but net inward migration is now on track to rebound to pre-pandemic levels of 235,000 people a year, the Centre for Population has found.

The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, said the centre’s 2022 statement, to be released on Friday, confirmed migration was “part of the solution” to skills and labour shortages.

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David Pocock wants stage-three tax cuts revisited in light of shrinking workforce

ACT senator suggests ageing population with proportion of taxpayers declining means situation has ‘changed significantly’ since cuts legislated in 2019

New data on Australia’s ageing population and shrinking workforce should push the government to review the stage-three tax cuts, independent senator David Pocock has said.

Pocock said economic circumstances have “changed significantly” since the Morrison government legislated the tax cuts, with Labor’s support, in 2019.

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New cars charging into Australia’s electric vehicle market in 2023

From high-end luxury sedans, to modest hatchbacks – we take a look at 10 of the new models set for release in 2023

Australia can’t brag about having the world’s most developed or diverse electric vehicle market, but that may be about to change in 2023 with a range of new battery-electric cars expected for release down under.

If 2022 showed the huge demand among Australian drivers for brands like the Kia EV6 and Hyundai Ioniq 5, dealers next year are expected to start taking orders on 21 new models.

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Paxlovid ‘last drug in the cupboard’ for Covid as variants in Australia evade other treatments

New study finds most medications are ineffective against strains currently circulating but thankfully full vaccination still offers protection

The antiviral Paxlovid is the “last drug left in the cupboard” to treat people vulnerable to severe disease and death from Covid-19, a leading virologist says.

The message from Associate Prof Stuart Turville is particularly concerning given the variants circulating now are adept at evading antibodies.

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Australia imposed Covid checks on travellers from China against advice of top health official

Prof Paul Kelly told Albanese government there was not ‘sufficient public health rationale’ for additional requirements targeting China

The Albanese government imposed pre-flight Covid checks on travellers from China against the advice of the chief medical officer, Prof Paul Kelly.

The 31 December advice, published by the health department, stated that Kelly did “not believe that there is sufficient public health rationale” for any additional requirements, labelling any restriction on travel from China “disproportionate to the risk”.

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Three people feared dead after two helicopters collide on Gold Coast

Queensland police say one aircraft landed but ‘there are injuries in the other helicopter with emergency services working at the scene’ near Sea World

At least 13 people are being assessed by the Queensland ambulance service after two helicopters collided on the Gold Coast in a “major incident”.

Newswire AAP reported “it is believed three people have been killed and two injured”.

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Australia news live: China’s Covid wave ‘key risk’ to supply chains, Jim Chalmers says

The treasurer says Covid testing for travellers from China ‘strikes the right balance’. Follow all the latest news

Storms to hit south-east Australia

Butler: China traveller Covid tests are ‘a modest measure’

This is a modest measure taken in line with pretty much every country to which we would usually compare ourselves. We are committed to making sure that we can continue to travel overseas, continue the personal and economic benefits that come from having open borders.

We just want to make sure we do that in a way that has the maximum information in a timely way that we need to protect Australians. The chief health officers have said across the board, a very broad consensus, we’re very well positioned here in Australia in the fight against Covid. We’ve got very high vaccination rates, particularly among the more vulnerable cohorts in the population.

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Labor under renewed pressure to axe stage-three tax cuts as Australia’s budget woes mount

The party voted in support of tax cuts while in opposition and went to the election promising no changes to the policy

Warnings from the treasurer, Jim Chalmers, that Australia’s economy is slowing and that the population is ageing have prompted calls to scrap the stage-three tax cuts.

Chalmers said the latest Australian population data showed an ageing population continues to present a demographic challenge for Australia and the budget, with the government having to keep one eye on current challenges, while the other focuses on longer term needs in health, pensions and support services.

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