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Severe weather threat eases

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 09 Mei 2013 | 21.51

Perth's wild weather is not over yet with several warnings in place for tonight

The Crawley Bay boatshed was all but underwater, framed under a stunning rainbow and a bruised sky early today. Reader Picture: Julien Flack Source: PerthNow

Thunderstorms lit up Perth and parts of the South West last night. Source: PerthNow

Catch up with Channel 9's Sally Ayhan for local weather and a sneak peek into what to expect over the next 24 hours.

SEVERE weather affecting Perth and southern WA is set to ease overnight, although scattered showers and thunderstorms may persist in some areas.

The wintery weather will persist into tomorrow with isolated showers and winds up to 30km/h but the worst has passed, with severe weather warnings for the South-West now cancelled.

In Perth, sunshine is expected to return over the weekend and persist through next week, with no rain in the long-range forecast at this stage.

For the South-West, isolated thunderstorms will be around overnight and into tomorrow, with the chance of hail early on Friday morning.

Wild night leaves thousands without power

Destructive winds lashed Perth and the South West last night, leaving up to 6000 homes without power.

The intense low pressure system delivered brutal squally storms and thunderstorms to much of the South West of the state from late yesterday and last night.

Strong winds brought trees down on powerlines and blacked out about 6000 homes, mainly in the South West towns of Pemberton and Manjimup and the Perth Hills, although there were disruptions in some Perth suburbs.

Email or tweet your stormy weather pics to us

Western Power crews worked throughout the night and today to restore power to homes.

Rottnest was blasted by 106km/h wind gusts around 1pm yesterday and buffeted by strong winds for the rest of the day and throughout the night.

The SES received about 130 calls for help from residents across Perth and the South West, mainly for water damage and uprooted trees. 

Wet weather in the city. Picture: Theo Fakos Source: PerthNow

The front brought significant falls to much of the Wheatbelt and agricultural areas, with rain pushing through to the eastern Wheatbelt areas and Goldfields.

In the previous 24 hours, a strong cold front dumped massive rainfall on many centres across Perth and the South West.

Perth recorded its heaviest rainfall since 2011 with almost 44mm to 9am yesterday and a further 23mm fell to 8am today, accompanied by regular wind gusts of more than 50km/h.

Chapman Hill, south of Busselton, topped the state's rain gauges on Wednesday with a 76mm deluge, while Rottnest had 61mm and Busselton collected 57mm, its heaviest fall since 2005.

Most suburbs across the metropolitan area had at least 40mm, with Swanbourne 56mm, Garden Island 53mm, Jandakot,  51mm. Mandurah missed the torrential downpour but received 26mm.

PERTH 7-DAY FORECAST

Friday 10 May - Min 12, Max 19. Partly cloudy. Isolated showers. Winds westerly 20 to 30 km/h turning southwesterly 15 to 25 km/h during the day.

Saturday 11 May - Min 11, Max 20. Morning shower or two.
Sunday 12 May - Min 8, Max 21. Mostly sunny.
Monday 13 May - Min 9, Max 21. Mostly sunny.
Tuesday 14 May - Min 11, Max 21. Mostly sunny.
Wednesday 15 May - Min 10, Max 22. Sunny.
Thursday 16 May - Min 11, Max 25. Sunny.


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Castro 'threatened ex over court case'

Triple kidnap suspect Ariel Castro shields his face after being confronted by reporters in the Cleveland police station where has taken for questioning. Source: Fox News

  • IN PICTURES: CLEVELAND'S HOUSE OF HORRORS  
  • Ariel Castro charged with four counts of kidnap, three of rape.
  • FBI investigators return to examine properties either side of Castro's house.  
  • Amanda Berry gave birth inside inflatable pool because of the 'mess'.

ARIEL Castro's former wife claimed she didn't testify about his violent behaviour after he paid her off with cash and a car before threatening her safety.

Puerto Rican-born Castro has been charged for the kidnap and rape of 27-year-old Amanda Berry, 23-year-old Gina DeJesus and 32-year-old Michele Knight, all of whom went missing separately not far from each other in Cleveland, Ohio. Castro also faces a count of kidnapping related to Berry's six-year-old daughter Jocelyn, who was born in captivity.

WHO IS THE THIRD VICTIM?

IS THE CLEVELAND HERO A FRAUD?

RESCUED WOMAN AND MUM YET TO SPEAK

An undated picture taken of Michele Knight before she was held in a house in Cleveland against her will with Gina DeJesus and Amanda Berry. Picture: Fox News 8

CASTRO'S 'DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE' PERSONALITY

Grimilda Figueroa, who had three daughters and a son with Castro, died last year from a brain tumour and it is not clear if she and her estranged husband had ever formally divorced, though the pair lived separate lives. Both had other long-term partners and Ms Figueroa had a son with her partner Fernando Colon, whom she met in 1995.

In 1994 a grand jury was due to her testimony relating to allegations Ms Figueroa had made regarding the brutal violence she said she suffered at the hands of Castro following surgery in 1993.

In a sworn statement, she said she dropped the charges after her ex bought her silence with a car, cash and an open threat to her safety, The Los Angeles Times reports.

Aduio of police officers comments when responding to Cleveland house call

"You know what will happen to you if you do testify," Ms Figueroa said in the affidavit. "I knew that he would find me and assault me again. … I was unable to offer my testimony before the grand jury. I did not tell anyone about the threats."  

Ms Figueroa's partner, Fernando Colon, was questioned over the 2004 disappearance of Gina DeJesus as his stepdaughter was her close friend.  He said he told the FBI to look into Castro's activities. He was later convicted of sexually molesting both Arlene and Emily.  Mr Colon told Fox 8 News that has always denied the charges and thinks Castro orchestrated the case against him which included testifying to divert attention away from his own crimes.

"Actually, that was something brilliant because if you come to think about it, he's got these girls prisoner in there, and put an accusation as such to me, makes him look like an angel, like he is such a proud father, such a trustworthy person," Colon said.

"If people would have listened, when I told them to look into this individual, these girls would not have been missing so long," he added.   

Hope dangerous for grieving families

Members of the FBI evidence response team carry out the front screen door from a house where three women were held, in Cleveland. Three women who disappeared a decade ago were found safe Monday, and police arrested three brothers accused of holding the victims against their will. Picture: Tony Dejak

 Thousands of children are missing all across America. The longer they are gone, the smaller the chances they will be found alive. So when three women who had been missing for a decade or more emerged from the house where they had been held captive, it provided an extraordinarily rare happy ending.

"I would definitely say it was a miracle," said Kelly Murphy, who founded Project Jason after her own son vanished to help other such families.

Murphy had worked with two of the Cleveland families while their daughters were missing. After they were found, she heard from many others who are still searching.

"The general response is that it gives us all hope," Murphy said. "I'm in the situation too, with my son almost missing for 12 years without a trace and without clues. It definitely gives us hope that there is a chance. If it happened to those girls, it can happen to us."

Action News 19 reporter Ed Gallek confronts Ariel Castro in the Cleveland police station

"To have hope helps you get through each day, hope that there's a good answer instead of the answer that nobody wants. It just helps you keep going, because it's very difficult to have to live with ambiguous loss."

But how much does it help to hope for a miracle, which by definition is almost impossible?

Some, like Murphy, need to keep that spark alive, however small. Others, like Jody Himebaugh, need to protect their emotions.

Himebaugh knows about what happened in Cleveland, but has avoided the details. His son Mark disappeared in 1991, at age 11.

FBI agents search another Cleveland house close to where three women were held.

"Every time I watch this kind of stuff, it rekindles the last 23 years," he said. "All it does, it just gives us hope again."

For Himebaugh, hope hurts. Whether hope is more painful than saying a permanent goodbye - that's impossible to figure.

"For the past 23 years, I've been happy for the families over that time who have recovered their kids, dead or alive," he said. "At least they've got closure. My biggest fear is I'm going to go to my grave and never know what happened to Mark, and why."

Sherry Hamby, a psychology professor at Sewanee: The University of the South who studies the victimization of children, said some families can become frozen in time at the point their child disappeared.

Dashcam footage shows the kidnapping suspect being questioned by an officer in 2008. Courtesy Fox News Official 16

"At some point, after so many years have gone by, there's a lot to be said for closure," Hamby said. "It's just not a natural state of being for humans to be frozen in this time, waiting. We can't stay in that kind of limbo forever."

The most difficult decisions, Hamby said, can involve what seem like mundane details.

"Are you going to pack up that child's things? Are you going to convert that room to another use?" she said. "I think the need for psychological closure just is necessary because of the concrete limitations that we are facing. It's just hard to go through life trying to not make any changes."

Murphy, of Project Jason, knows families who have chosen to believe their missing child is dead, and she does not begrudge them that choice.

But Murphy holds onto hope, "because it keeps us focused on the future."

"It's just unfortunate that in our case," she said, "we don't know what the future holds."

Castro faces court in next few hours

The former US school bus driver charged with holding three young women in captivity and raping them in a decade-long horror, is due to appear in an Ohio court on Thursday local time, three days after their dramatic rescue.

Castro is due in court  in the next few hours for arraignment.

A photo of Ariel Castro released by the Cleveland Police Department following his arrest.

His two brothers are also scheduled to make a court appearance, but on misdemeanour charges unrelated to the kidnappings and rapes, authorities said.

Deputy Police Chief Ed Tomba said that a paternity test on Ariel Castro was being done to establish who fathered Berry's child. He reportedly made sure Joceyln didn't know the real names of either Knight or DeJesus in case she accidentally mentioned them when he took her on trips to the outside world.

The young girl was said to be home schooled and none of the women were ever visited by or went out to see a doctor or medical professional during their years in captivity.

The police chief refused to comment on reports that Castro had impregnated Knight at least five times and would punch her in the stomach until she miscarried.

Amanda Berry, left, and Gina DeJesus have been found alive after disappearing in the US city of Cleveland about a decade ago. Picture: AFP

Police Chief Michael McGrath earlier told NBC he was "absolutely" sure police did everything they could to find the women over the years.

He disputed claims by neighbours that officers had been called to the house before for suspicious circumstances.

Castro, a former school bus driver whose family hails from Puerto Rico, has been described as a friendly neighbour who raised few suspicions but who also kept to himself, rarely if ever allowing anyone inside his home.

"Ariel kept everybody at a distance," Tomba said. "He ran the show."

Castro 'marked captivity with cake'

Details have emerged of the horrific circumstance in which the 3 women were held in a US house for 10 years

Inside the Seymour Avenue house, the three women who last celebrated birthdays with their families about a decade ago saw year after year perversely marked by Castro's serving of a cake on the day each woman was abducted, according to one of DeJesus's cousins.

"He would celebrate their abduction day as their new birthday," the cousin said, adding that DeJesus had pleaded with family not to ask her about her years in captivity.
 

Technology helps thwart kidnappers: experts

Experts say the implementation of the amber alert system for a child abduction emergency which ensures saturation coverage on cable television and social media is helping them put pressure on abductors.

"When an Amber Alert goes out, there is so much public pressure on the abductor that they often release the child before they can get hurt," Robert G. Lowery Jr. from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children told The Washington Post. "The vast majority of children now escape death because of Amber Alert."

The system enacted means stories are quickly transmitted on 24 hour cable TV shows, CCTV vision is scrutinised by the police, known sex offenders are looked at, hotlines for tips are quickly set up, alerts are sent via Twitter and Facebook plus police study traffic images.  Lowery's non-profit group has also recently launched a service to send amber alert information to every mobile phone within range of the mobile phone tower where the child went missing.

The ability of computer programs to create realistic images of what a kidnapped child may look like years after they went missing is also vital.

Audio reveals moment of girls' rescue

A stunned police officer called "we found 'em, we found 'em" when three kidnap victims were rescued in Cleveland on Tuesday. Now they're not sure exactly how many were held at the house.

The three women were subjected to prolonged sexual and psychological abuse and suffered miscarriages, a city councilman briefed on the case said.

At the time of the rescue, Michele Knight told police she was unsure exactly how many women were detained inside the house, but that there may have been other victims.

A source has reportedly told The Mirror: "Police are unsure as to how many victims there may have been over the past 10 years but they are following up on every single lead they get."

FBI investigators have begun examining houses on either side of the Seymour Ave, Cleveland, property in which the three captives were kept locked in separate rooms. Fox News reports these properties had previously been owned by the Castro family.

Cleveland's safety director Marty Flask said human remains have not been found at the Castro home on Seymour Avenue. More than 200 items of evidence have so far been taken from the house in which the three were held.

Audio has been released of the frantic emergency call Amanda Berry made after escaping a kidnapping lasting ten years.

Meanwhile, Cleveland police have released the audio recording of the officers' point of view while responding to Amanda Berry's and Charles Ramsey's 911 calls.

Upon arriving at 5.55pm, the officers immediately realised the callers were not cranks.

"This might be for real," one of the officers said while asking for an ambulance.

"Georgina DeJesus might be in this house also," another said.

Audio released by the Cleveland Police Department captures Charles Ramsey's call to emergency services.

With the sound of a woman crying in the background, one officer calls: "We found em. We found em".

Later: "We also have a Michele Knight in the house. I don't know if you want to look that up in the radio, uh the system."

Police press conference

Police told media at a press conference this morning that the three captives never left the property and were only allowed outside twice.

The women were allowed to leave the home briefly, both times to go "into the garage in disguise,'' deputy police chief Ed Tomba told reporters.

"They were in that home. They don't believe they've been outside of the home for the last 10 years,'' he said.

"They were not in one room, but they did know each other and they did know each other was there.''

He refused to comment on reports that the women had become pregnant on several occasions and had lost the babies.

The house was found to be in "disarray" when investigators entered.

Monday was the first time Amanda, Gina or Michele tried to escape - ever,  Tomba said.

Councilman Brian Cummins said many details remained unclear, including the number of pregnancies and the conditions under which the miscarriages occurred.

He said the women were kept in the basement for some time without having access to the rest of the house.  Earlier, city police chief Michael McGrath had said the women were "bound and there were chains and ropes in the hall''.
 
"It sounds pretty gruesome,'' Cummins said.

Suspect 'needed help'

Sources told the local Cleveland news outlet that Ariel Castro "talks about a sex addiction and needing help" and that he "puts some blame on the victims for getting in the car with him."

WEWS-TV reports sources as saying Castro had offered Amanda Berry and Michele Knight rides home, but took them to his house instead.

Neighbors in the largely Puerto Rican neighborhood said he had taken part in the search for one of the missing women, performed music at a fundraiser for her and attended a candlelight vigil, where he comforted her mother.

The captives reportedly watched the vigils on television from their basement prison.

"When we went out to look for Gina, he helped pass out fliers,'' said Khalid Samad, a community activist who said Castro was friends with DeJesus' father.

Castro, just like everyone else in the tight-knit, mostly Puerto Rican neighbourhood, seemed shaken by the 2004 disappearance of Ms DeJesus.

Fox news reports the three Castro brothers are being held in separate cells under additional police protection as inmates - even though they are kept separate - are doing all they can to give the men "a hard time".

Prosecutors brought no charges against his brothers, Pedro, 54, and Onil, 50, saying there was no evidence they had any part in the crime. Police said they were detained because they were with Ariel at the time of his arrest and have outstanding warrants.

"There is nothing that leads us to believe that they (the brothers) were involved or had any knowledge of this,'' Deputy Police Chief Ed Tomba said.

"We found no facts to link them to the crime.''

The police chief told the news conference that a paternity test on Ariel Castro was being done to establish who fathered Berry's now 6-year-old child.

As recently as 2005, Castro was accused of repeated acts of violence against his children's mother. A domestic-violence court filing at the time accused Ariel Castro of twice breaking the nose of his children's mother, knocking out a tooth, dislocating each shoulder and threatening to kill her and her daughters three or four times in a year.

Victims' families speak

Two of the women were welcomed home Wednesday by jubilant crowds. Neither Berry nor Gina DeJesus, about 23, spoke publicly, and their families pleaded for patience and time alone. The third captive, Michele Knight, 32, was reported in good condition at a local hospital.

Ms Berry was expected to front the media today to make a statement but instead her older sister, Beth Serrano, appeared outside her home overnight (about 2am AEST). 

Ms Serrano thanked everyone for their support over the years and requested privacy for the family.

"I want to thank the public and media for their support and courage over the years. At this time our family would request privacy so my sister and niece and I can have time to recover," she told a thicket of microphones and lenses.

"We appreciate all you have done for us throughout the past ten years. Please respect our privacy until we are ready to make our statements. And thank you," she added, before breaking down in tears.

Ms DeJesus also arrived home giving a thumbs up to those gathered outside her home but not speaking to reporters.

Her aunt Sandra Ruiz made a statement on behalf of the family in which she asked the community not to retaliate against the Castro family and to keep searching for another missing girl, Ashely Summers, who was 14 when she disappeared in 2007 from the same Cleveland neighbourhood.

Ms Ruiz described Amanda Berry and Michele Knight as "members of our family now."

"Thank you, again, for your prayers and support. There are not enough words to say or express the joy that we feel for the return of our family member Gina," she said. "Now we need to, as a whole, to rally together, to look next door, and bring our other family member that is missing, Ashley Summers, OK?"

"Be patient with us," she said.  "When we are ready ... we will talk to all of you."

Family members of Ms Knight said she remains in hospital but is doing well.  A cousin told CNN that she "has the mind of a child."

Life in house of horror

Details are emerging about the house that they were held captive in.  Police have confirmed that chains were found on the walls and that the women were only allowed outside for very brief periods of time.

WKYC reported that Ms Knight was forced to deliver Ms Berry's baby, Jocelyn, in an inflatable pool "so the mess was easier to clean up".

"Michele stated that Ariel told her that if the baby died, that he'd kill her," the police report states.

The report said Ms Knight put her mouth to the Jocelyn's mouth and "breathed for her" to keep them both alive.

NewsChannel5 reports Michele Knight was pregnant by Ariel Castro five times. They allege he forced an abortion each time by punching her in the stomach.

19 Action News says its reporter has been told Ariel Castro made a suicide note years ago detailing why he committed the kidnappings.

Police told media at a press conference this morning that the three captives had initially been chained in the building's basement. However, they were later allowed to live in separate rooms upstairs and were hidden in the attic when visitors came to the house.

"We have confirmation they were bound and there were chains and ropes in the hall," Michael McGrath, Cleveland's chief of police told the US Today show.

However, reports have suggested that six-year-old Jocelyn, who was born to Ms Berry while in captivity, was allowed out of the house to visit Ariel Castro's mother, Lillian Rodriguez, who she called 'grandmother'.  It is unconfirmed if Ariel Castro is the father of Ms Berry's child.

Neighbours say they reported seeing three women outside on leashes and a woman pounding on a window with a child in her hand's but that police did nothing.

Mr McGrath said that there had been no record of those calls coming into police over the past 10 years.  Asked if those calls could be made but that a recording was documented, Mr McGrath replied  "We have no record of those calls coming in over the past 10 years''.

CNN is reporting details about Amanda Berry's escape bid.

Castro had left the house without locking the main door. A lighter "storm door" was locked, however.

Castro had previously "tested" his captives by pretending to leave the house with the door unlocked. He would then return suddenly.

Amanda had "reached breaking point" before making her escape bid earlier this week.


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WA price pain: families slugged an extra $218

Struggling WA families have been dealt another blow with the state government announcing a raft of price hikes across utilities and transport

WEST Australians will be slugged an extra $218 a year come July 1 for household fees and charges, which include a 4 per cent hike in electricity fees.

Despite Premier Colin Barnett promising during the State Election that next financial year's electricity hikes would be kept at or around the inflation rate of 2.75 per cent, electricity charges will go up an extra $58 a year for families, bringing their average yearly electricity bill to $1510.

Ahead of the August 8 State Budget, Treasurer Troy Buswell also announced today that motor vehicle charges would increase an extra $25.24 a year, which includes a $3.80 hike for driver licence fees and $11.40 for motor vehicle licence fees.

He also revealed utility charges - which include electricity and water - would increase $137 a year, public transport $39 a year and the emergency services levy $16.


In total, the average family will pay $4987 in household fees and charges, up from $4769 last year.

And there was further bad news for WA households, with Mr Buswell warning electricity charges, which have already gone up 62 per cent since 2008, could rise a further 7 per cent next year.

The Treasurer said West Australians should brace themselves for a tough Budget and said the State Government was currently looking at savings in several areas to meet a drop in revenue.

He warned if the Government did not reign in spending and live within its means, then State debt could spiral beyond the estimated $25 billion in 2015.

"These increases are a sensible measure that will provide certainty for our State economy, while also supporting Western Australian families and individuals," he said.

"Last year, Western Australian households spent less on household government expenses than every other State and Territory.

Troy Buswell has delivered more bad news for West Australian households.

"We have worked hard again this year to ensure that State Government fees and charges will remain low in comparison to other States."

Opposition Leader Mark McGowan said the news would be devastating to families already struggling with the cost of living.

"Once again Colin Barnett has attacked WA family budgets, simply because he is incapable of managing his Government's budget," Mr McGowan said.

"Under Mr Barnett's watch, the cost of electricity has now increased by close to 70 per cent and the cost of water by 63 per cent.

"During Mr Barnett's first term of office he increased household fees and charges by more than $1000. "

PERTHNOW READER REACTION

The reaction from many PerthNow readers to the news was swift and angry:

J: Its great everythings going up but we don't get no increases in wages. And centrelink cut our carers allowance. Our utilities are the lowest we can be. We don't have heating or anything else fancy. Just the basic like the dark ages. Thanks to everyone who voted this government in. Now we all pay.

Rachael of Seville Grove: How can they keep putting stuff up!! We don't get paid any more!! Where do they think the bloody money is coming from??

Jeffery of Midland: I sincerely hope all you liberal voters are bloody happy, because this is only the start of it. this government doesnt give a rams backside about any west australian, buswell doesnt care if the average working family are struggling at the momment , let alone these increases,he couldnt give a damn if many pensioners cant survive or keep warm this winter. this government knows that many pensioners will have to cut back on items of which is usually food to pay these bloody increases.

However, other readers saw the increases differently:

Common Sense: 1.75% = $218? A pittance in the grand scheme of things. If that small amount is going to make or break you, you're screwed anyways. It's not a matter of if, but when. Even if electricity didn't go up this time, something else will and eventually you'll be pushed over the edge. No sympathy for pensioners either. You've had an entire lifetime to save and if you haven't done it by now, that's too bad.

Brett: Wow, the people of Perth never change, wah wah wah! Most people can easily afford electricity bills. Listen to the rubbish about "scraping by" yet look around, everyone is driving new vehicles while trying to hold a conversation on their smartphone or listening to their iPod. Obviously the majority of us have it damn good. Stop whinging!


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The battle that made Ben a war hero

Special Operations Task Group soldiers make their way to a waiting UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter after a Shura in Sha Wali Kot. Picture: ADF Source: Supplied

"It was tense, hot and arduous ... it was kill or be killed."

For sniper team leader Sergeant Garry Robinson - a veteran on his third deployment to Afghanistan - it was the most intense fighting he had experienced.

The commandos were surrounded by more than 100 Taliban fighters and were pinned down by withering rocket propelled grenade and machinegun fire at one of the enemy's most secure fortresses in southern Afghanistan, the village of Chenartu in Shah Wali Kot.

The rate of fire raking the dangerously exposed Diggers shocked even the most hardened soldiers in their ranks.

Men like 2nd Commando Regiment sniper team leader Sergeant Robinson who occupied a high knoll as the "eyes and ears" of his boss the commander of Alpha Company, Major 'M' (his identity is protected).

The ADF has revealed further details surrounding its actions that won SOTG members 13 bravery awards.

"It was tense, hot and arduous," Sergeant Robinson said.

"It was kill or be killed. They were trying to kill me so I have no remorse at all," he said.

On more than one occasion Sergeant Robinson, who was severely wounded in a fatal chopper crash later in the operation, feared he would be overrun as heavy fire and rockets rained down from three sides as they sought cover on the sparse ground "digging holes with their eyelids".

It was June 10, 2010 and four days later a large Taliban force had been routed, several key leaders and dozens of fighters were dead, truck loads of enemy weapons had been seized and the local people were engaging with authorities for the first time in years.

Australian Special Operations Task Group troops and Afghan allies move towards a waiting CH-47 Chinook helicopter as part of the Shah Wali Kot Offensive. Picture: ADF

The Eastern Shah Wali Kot offensive that included the Battles of Chenartu and Tizak, will go down in the annals of Australian military history alongside Tobruk, Long Tan and Kapyong.

Almost three years after the most intense fighting of the war took place in Northern Kandahar Province, the army has finally released details of one of the most successful counter-insurgency operations of the entire campaign.

The two key combat elements were a 25-strong force from Number 2 SAS Squadron and about 100 troops from the 2nd Commando Regiment.

The SAS operators provided speed and stealth and the commandos the "sledgehammer" effect. In support were the Special Operations Engineer Regiment and the Logistics Squadron. Working with the Australians were Afghan Special Police and helicopters from the US 101st Airborne Division.

Afghan officers from the Provincial Police Response Company and Australian Special Operations Task Group troops lift off in a UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter as part of the Shah Wali Kot Offensive. Picture: ADF

The Australian force was honed to a fighting edge and was well motivated after two combat engineers, Sappers Jacob Moreland and Darren Smith had been killed just two days earlier by bombs built from components coming through the Shah Wali Kot area.

During the so-called "shaping phase" several Bushmaster vehicles were destroyed as the special forces operators prowled around country that had been impenetrable to coalition forces. It was so wild that in some isolated valleys the locals had not seen foreigners since the Russian war of the 1980s.

By June 6 the bait had been laid and the Diggers waited and watched before 120 commandos moved "into the lions' den".

On June 9 the trap was set and early the next morning the enemy unleashed their firepower.

A 500lb bomb strike an insurgent position during the Shah Wali Kot offensive. Picture: ADF

Sergeant Robinson and his sniper team had the honour of claiming the first Taliban kill and before long nine enemy lay dead and women and children were moving away from the village. That meant just one thing - big trouble.

At 10am every Australian position was exposed to a hail of gunfire and RPGs. The diggers counter attacked and drove the enemy out of the area.

The enemy mounted another huge counter-attack and Major `M' was forced to call in an American A-10 Thunderbolt ground attack aircraft to break up the hostile force. The enemy again withdrew to lick their wounds as night fell.

An expected attack the next morning did not eventuate and intelligence reports indicated that a senior Taliban commander was in the nearby village of Tizak planning a major attack to wipe out the diggers. 'E' troop from Number 2 Squadron SAS was launched on four Blackhawk helicopters and two Apache attack choppers on a "kill/capture" mission.

As the birds landed, they were engaged by withering small arms and RPG fire from a force three times their size. Two men were wounded and all four Blackhawks and one Apache were damaged.

Soon afterwards, Corporal Ben Roberts-Smith and his team leader Sergeant 'P' took decisive action to eliminate the enemy machine guns that had most of the force pinned down. They ran across 40 metres of open ground and in a fierce fight took out three machine guns and killed more than a dozen enemy fighters.

"It was absolute valour and courage to achieve that," Colonel Burns said.

"These were well trained foreign fighters, not low-level fighters. They were very fanatical.

"The guys systematically broke down that position and destroyed every single enemy machine gun position and every enemy in that village."

Roberts-Smith was awarded a Victoria Cross and Sergeant `P' the Star of Gallantry for their extreme valour.

Luck had been with the Australians throughout the month-long mission and it stayed true until the very last raid of the operation on June 21 when a Blackhawk crashed killing commandos Ben Chuck, Scott Palmer and Timothy Aplin and gravely wounding Sergeant Robinson.

No prisoners were taken during the battles and the number of enemy dead and wounded was estimated at about 100.

INDIVIDUAL HONOURS FROM SHAH WALI KOT

1 Victoria Cross

1 Star of Gallantry

1 Medal for Gallantry

1 Commendation for Gallantry

1 Bar to Distinguished Service Cross (DSC)

1 DSC

2 DSM (including Sergeant Robinson)

4 Commendations for Distinguished Service


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Load of trouble sets cargo jet ablaze

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 08 Mei 2013 | 21.51

At least one person was injured in the cargo accident. (AP Photo) Source: AP

IT looks like the aftermath of a plane crash, but the fire and smoke billowing from this wrecked jet is actually the result of a clumsy accident on the ground.

The British-made BAe 146 cargo plane caught fire while being unloaded at the airport in Wamena, Papua province, Indonesia.

An official said blaze started after a drum of oil fell from the aircraft and somehow ignited, injuring at least one airport worker.

Local police chief Lt. Col. Fernando Napitupulu said the fire quickly roared through the plane, sending black smoke billowing. It took two hours to extinguish.

Smoke billows from the cargo plane in Wamena, Papua province, Indonesia. (AP Photo)

Witnesses said they heard an explosion before the fire began.

An investigation into the incident is under way and at least seven people, including the pilot and co-pilot, will be questioned, Napitupulu said.

The plane belongs to Nusantara Air Charter and had regularly served cargo flights from the province's capital, Jayapura, to Wamena, capital of the mountainous district of Jayawijaya, Napitupulu said.

Air transportation is important in rugged Papua, the second-largest island in the vast Indonesian archipelago.


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Gatsby 'divisive and controversial'

Leonardo DiCaprio and Carey Mulligan in a scene from Baz Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby. Picture: Warner Bros Source: Supplied

THE Great Gatsby is an essay in excess. So who better than Baz Luhrmann to put F Scott Fitzgerald's Roaring Twenties classic on screen, using all the firepower of 21st-century film-making?

The famously over-the-top director of 2001 musical Moulin Rouge, starring Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor, does not disappoint.

It's not just that his Gatsby is in eye-popping 3D and has a movie score produced by Jay-Z, the world's most famous rapper. It features spectacular parties, dazzling costumes, and, at times, there are so many coloured lights strung around the Gatsby estate that it resembles an enormous Christmas tree. You can certainly see where the $100million dollar budget went.

No one wants to watch a page-by-page re-creation of Fitzgerald's 1925 novel unless there's a hook to draw them in, and Luhrmann's production is certainly a visual feast. But does it work as a movie?

To a great extent, yes, and far more so than the 1974 version starring Robert Redford and Mia Farrow. Even so, it's going to divide opinion right down the middle.

Leonardo DiCaprio with Carey Mulligan in Baz Lurhmann's The Great Gatsby.

To some, Fitzgerald's work is a literary landmark that you tamper with at your peril. Luhrmann has done some controversial things, particularly with the structure of the narrative. It didn't bother me, but a few of my American friends were livid.

There are some moments early on in the movie that I would question, too, and it's a little slow to get going. But Luhrmann has the fundamentals right, not least with the performances by the principal characters.

If the four-way story involving Jay Gatsby, narrator Nick Carraway, social supernova Daisy Buchanan and her fractious but fabulously wealthy husband Tom didn't click, then all would be lost. But Leonardo DiCaprio as Gatsby is superb – the best I've seen him on screen.

Gatsby doesn't want you to see him as a brute, but he is. He knew Daisy before Tom Buchanan did and he wants her back. "Tell him you never loved him," Gatsby tells Daisy, but to no avail.

Catherine Martin collaborated with Prada to create the stunning costumes for The Great Gatsby.

Carey Mulligan plays the object of Gatsby's obsessive love but her delicate performance signals that Daisy has no intention of giving up everything she's got to run away with him. She's happy to frolic and play but she ain't giving it all away. Mulligan looks very much the golden girl she's meant to portray. She captures Daisy's carefree insouciance well, too, as well as her sense of entitlement. I loved the moment when she turns up at Carraway's shack and her chauffeur places a rug on the muddy path so her shoes don't get dirty.

Tobey Maguire's Carraway is the author/narrator. He's introduced to us in the first frame as an alcoholic being treated in an institution. His physician urges him to write about what ails him, in the hope it may cure him. It's a clumsy way of getting into the film but Maguire's effortless acting helps.

Once they get going, Luhrmann's depiction of the revelry at Gatsby's estate are as sumptuous, glistening and enormous as Fitzgerald described. But I cared little for them – although I did like the observation made by sportswoman Jordan Baker, played beautifully by Elizabeth Debicki, that "large parties are so intimate, small ones aren't any good".

No, the test for me was whether Luhrmann would be able to scale it down to the intimate core of the story, and let us see the brutal and cruel truth of what these idle rich really represent. (I exclude Carraway because he's the only character in the story who cares a jot about anything.) Here, Luhrmann largely succeeds, bringing out the carelessness at the heart of Tom and Daisy, and conveying the essential message that riches rob us of our humanity. That message resonates as much today as it did in Fitzgerald's day.

Tobey Maguire as Nick Carraway and Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby in a scene from "The Great Gatsby". Picture: AP Photo/Warner Bros.

I suspect Luhrmann had to lure a younger audience in with 3D effects, but it is used well; it's never too intrusive. The music from the likes of US pop star Will.i.am, flame-haired Brit Florence + The Machine, former Roxy Music frontman Bryan Ferry, Scot Emeli Sande and wife of Jay-Z, Beyonce, won't be to all tastes, but will no doubt help the soundtrack soar to the top of the charts as happened with Moulin Rouge and Romeo & Juliet, another Luhrmann film.

The Great Gatsby opens in the US on Friday, and so far the reviews have been good-to-mixed. Australian audiences will have to wait until May 30 – after a whopping European premiere at the Cannes Film Festival next Wednesday night.

I can see why the Cannes programmers picked it. What better home for a meditation on glamour? But as I say, it's going to be divisive and controversial.

And, 'old sport' – as Gatsby would say – that's all to the good.


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The next frontier for gas production?

Buru's well at Yulleroo, near Broome. Source: PerthNow

PREMIER Colin Barnett's gas ambitions have switched from the offshore Browse Basin to the onshore Canning Basin.

Still smarting from the decision of Woodside and its joint-venture partners to dump the Premier's grand plan for a onshore processing precinct at James Price Point on the Kimberley coastline for Browse gas, the WA Government is moving full steam ahead to exploit the shale gas riches in the Canning Basin.

Mr Barnett yesterday introduced a Bill into State Parliament that will ratify an agreement to develop the vast onshore Canning resource, which covers more than 530,000sqm across the Kimberley.

The Bill formalises an agreement signed by the State Government and joint venture partners Buru Energy and Mitsubishi Corporation last November. Buru Energy, which has the biggest acreage in the Canning Basin, was the best performing company on the ASX in the past financial year.


In February, The Sunday Times revealed the growing hype around the Canning Basin as the next frontier for gas production.

"This legislation will bring about the continued exploration for natural gas in the remote Canning Basin, the development of a gas pipeline to the Pilbara and ensure Western Australian consumers have first use of any gas discovered," Mr Barnett said.

The Premier said the US Energy Information Administration estimated the Canning Basin unconventional gas resources at about 229 trillion cubic feet - about one and a half times WA's currently identified offshore resources. 

The gas resources are located between two and four kilometres below the ground's surface.

CCI chief executive James Pearson said the agreement would help secure WA's future energy supply and was a positive for the economy.

"This is an important step in the development of the Kimberley region and potentially the supply of gas to WA consumers in the future," he said.

"Success would benefit the broader WA economy by providing flow on benefits to other industries and creating more jobs for West Australians."

Under the agreement, if the Joint Venture  finds commercially viable gas by mid-2016, it will need to submit a plan to build the domestic gas project, including a pipeline to connect the state's gas network to the Pilbara.

"Tapping this vast resource will guarantee Western Australia's domestic gas supplies well into the future," Mr Barnett said.

"Because this gas is located onshore, it is also entirely owned by the State Government.

"This agreement ensures gas discoveries are rapidly brought into production, and that gas is delivered to the State's domestic gas network, before any is exported."

Environmental groups are watching developments closely because extraction of the shale gas will require   hydraulic fracturing, better known as fracking,which they claim causes dangerous water pollution.

Shale gas has been hailed as the saviour of the US economy, supplying cheap energy to its industries. WA mining officials are licking their lips at the potential shale gas riches here, as is the industry.

Though Buru is already in a joint venture with Japanese conglomerate Mitsubishi, other international gas players are looking to get involved.
 
Another local explorer, New Standard Energy, has a partnership with global oil and gas giant Conoco Phillips.

And in February, PetroChina also grabbed a piece of the Canning Basin pie.


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Gusty storms set to wreak more havoc on WA

Perth's wild weather is not over yet with several warnings in place for tonight

A twitter pic showing a cold front moving over Roebourne. PICTURE: Simon te Brinke (Twitter) Source: PerthNow

Heavy overnight rain caused minor in parts of Perth and the South West. Picture: Daniel Wilkins Source: PerthNow

Bureau of Meteorology satellite image shows the strong cold front and low pressure system moving across the state. Source: PerthNow

Catch up with Channel 9's Sally Ayhan for local weather and a sneak peek into what to expect over the next 24 hours.

PERTH and WA's South-West is preparing for more bad weather overnight after being battered today by 100km/h winds and driving rain.

A strong cold front dumped massive rain on many centres over the last 24 hours and much of the lower half of the state is preparing for another storm later this evening, with the worst expected after 10pm.

Perth recorded its heaviest rainfall since 2011 with almost 44mm to 9am and a further 12mm fell before 7pm today, accompanied by regular wind gusts of more than 50km/h.

Email or tweet your stormy weather pics to us

A PerthNow reader emailed this image of damage to their patio, spa and garden at their Mandurah home. Source: PerthNow

Rottnest Island and Garden Island recorded gusts in excess of 100km/h today, while winds at Bickley and Ocean Reef peaked at 95km/h.

The weather caused havoc on the roads, with traffic along with Kwinana Freeway already banking up by 3pm.

A severe weather warning remains in place for much of southern WA tonight, including the Perth metro area, Bunbury, Mandurah, Busselton, Margaret River, Katanning and York.

The Bureau of Meteorology forecasts that the deep low could bring damaging winds of up to 100km/h, while isolated areas could cop gusts as high as 125km/h.

Thursday's forecast is for heavy and gusty showers, with isolated thunderstorms early in the morning and for a period in the afternoon.

This morning Chapman Hill, south of Busselton, topped the state's rain gauges with a 76mm deluge, while Rottnest had 61mm and Busselton itself collected 57mm, its heaviest fall since 2005.

Most suburbs across the metropolitan area had at least 40mm, with Swanbourne 56mm, Garden Island 53mm, Jandakot 51mm. Mandurah missed the torrential downpour but received 26mm.

The SES in Perth received 52 calls for help, mainly for water damage and minor flooding. More than 30 SES volunteers from 14 units - 11 in the metropolitan area and three in regional areas - were called to assist.

Wet weather in the city. Picture: Theo Fakos Source: PerthNow

Power knocked out in Mullewa

About 300 people in Mullewa, 450km north-east of Perth, lost power during the storm but Western Power advise it should be restored today.

Main Roads reports several cases of flooded roads causing traffic disruption this morning and there has been a spate of minor accidents, including a break-down in the westbound lanes of the new three-lane Northbridge Tunnel, which is causing problems.

The intersection of Armadale Road and Waterworks Roads, Haynes, has been flooded due to heavy rain.

In Canning Vale, South Street (eastbound) the left lane just before Bannister Road is blocked due to flooding.

Heavy falls in South West

In the South West there were also heavy falls, but mainly on the coast, with Chapman Hill, just south of Busselton, topping the state with 76mm, Cape Leeuwin 60mm, Busselton and Cowaramup 57mm and Witchcliffe 47mm.

Some good falls reached the agricultural areas with Pingelly 31mm, Bannister 27mm, Cuballing 22mm, Wandering 17mm and Katanning 14mm, in the Great Southern.

In the Central Wheatbelt, Dalwallinu got 12mm, Northam 10mm and Cunderdin 5mm.

Further north, in the Central West, Geraldton and Dongara got 30mm, Kalbarri 26mm and Morawa 22mm.

The rain even reached as far north as Shark Bay, 830km north of Perth, which had 27mm.

The rain is great news for farmers who got some, but much of the eastern and northern Wheatbelt appears to have missed out so far. However more showers and possible thunderstorms are expected for the next 48 hours as the front and low pressure system continue to move east.

Perth radar: Watch the storm front hit

The Department of Fire and Emergency Services advises that people should take precautions such as storing loose objects, prepare an emergency kit, secure boats, move vehicles undercover and make sure pets are in a safe area.

Drivers have been urged to take extra care on roads in Perth and southern WA, with heavy rain and strong winds to continue this evening and tomorrow morning that will make driving conditions dangerous.
 
WHAT TO DO:

DFES's State Emergency Service advises motorists to:
• Slow down, turn your lights on and keep a safe distance from other drivers
• If it is raining heavily and you cannot see, pull over and park with your hazard lights on until the rain clears
• Take care in areas that have been flooded and do not drive into water of unknown depth and current
• Be careful on gravel roads as surfaces will be slippery and muddy, and vehicles could become bogged.
 
IMPORTANT NUMBERS
• If your home has been badly damaged by a storm call the SES on 132 500
• In a life threatening situation call 000
• For information about road conditions contact Main Roads WA on 138 138
• For the latest weather information visit www.bom.gov.au or call 1300 659 213.
 
More information about what to do before, during or after a storm can be found at www.dfes.wa.gov.au 

*****************************

PERTH 7-DAY FORECAST

Thursday 9 May - Min 13, Max 21.
Cloudy. Showers, increasing for a period early afternoon, heavy and gusty at times. Isolated thunderstorms early in the morning and again for a period in the afternoon. Damaging winds possible early in the morning. Winds westerly 30 to 40 km/h.

Friday 10 May - Min 12, Max 18. Partly cloudy. Scattered showers. Winds west to southwesterly 20 to 30 km/h.
Saturday 11 May - Min 12, Max 21. Morning shower or two.
Sunday 12 May - Min 10, Max 22. Partly cloudy.
Monday 13 May - Min 11, Max 23. Partly cloudy.
Tuesday 14 May - Min 11, Max 23. Partly cloudy.
Wednesday 15 May - Min 12, Max 25. Sunny.


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Teacher sacked for bikini shoot

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 07 Mei 2013 | 21.51

A Florida high school teacher has been asked to resign after posing for a bikini model shoot. Picture via Olivia Sprauer Source: Supplied

A FLORIDA high school teacher was escorted off campus after her principal was shown pictures from a bikini modelling shoot.

Olivia Sprauer was a teacher at the Martin County High School when she was called to the principal's office on April 29.

She was shown a photo he had been sent by a member of the school community.

It was one of a set of photos featuring Spraur posing in bikinis and lingerie.

Sprauer said once she had confirmed the model was her, the principal asked for her resignation and had her escorted out of the school.

A Florida high school teacher has been asked to resign after posing for a bikini model shoot. Picture via Olivia Sprauer

Sprauer says she had planned to leave the school at the end of the year anyway.

She plans to continue her modelling career and attend graduate school.

A Florida high school teacher has been asked to resign after posing for a bikini model shoot. Picture via Olivia Spraur Source: Supplied


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The man who kidnapped three women

Missing Cleveland woman Amanda Berry with her sister and unidentified girl after rescue. Picture: WOIO-TV/passantino/Twitter Source: Supplied

Gina DeJesus and Amanda Berry, who have been found after being abducted separately as teenagers in 2003. Picture: FBI Source: Supplied

AS details emerge of the incredible rescue of abducted women Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michele Knight, focus moves to their alleged kidnappers and how they managed to keep them hidden for a decade.

Cleveland Police have confirmed three suspects, Hispanic males aged 50, 52 and 54, are under arrest.

Cleveland police officers have also begun an extensive search of the property.

"Hello? I need them [the police] now, before he gets back," an emotional Berry tells the 911 operator during her frantic neighbourhood rescue.

"Who's the guy that went out?" asks the operator.

"His name is Ariel Castro. He's 52. I'm Amanda Berry. I've been in the news for the last ten years."

So what do we know about Castro the man alleged to have abducted the women and kept them in his home for years.

The Cleveland Leader has reported that Castro lived in the house where the women were found since 1992. One year later according to NewsChannel5 he was arrested for domestic violence, although the victim of that apparent attack has not been identified.

The case was later dismissed  but during the same month he was arrested for disorderly conduct and pleaded guilty.

NewsChannel5 also reports that he was stopped six times by Cleveland Police between 1995 and 2008 for traffic violations.

A representative with the Cleveland Metropolitan School District confirmed that a man by the name of Ariel Castro used to work as a bus driver for the district.  However, spokesperson Roseann Canfora would not confirm it was the current suspect amid reports he was dismissed for doing an illegal U-turn while children were on the bus in 2012.

The district is expected to release a statement and have more information on Castro Tuesday morning US time.

Police are also said to be investigating a possible connection between Castro's daughter and Amanda Berry, who may have been classmates.

An article by a man called Ariel "Anthony" Castro – who said he was a journalism student - was published in community newspaper The Plain Press in 2004 surrounding the disappearance of Gina DeJesus. 

The editor of the paper told US Correspondent for the UK's Daily Telegraph he believes the author is the son of the Ariel Castro arrested today.

The Sydney Morning Herald reports he is now a journalist at an NBC affiliate station in Cleveland.

"The day 14-year-old Gina DeJesus was last seen on her way home from Wilbur Wright Middle School, neighbourhood residents have been taken by an overwhelming need for caution.

"One thing is for certain, however. Almost everyone feels a connection with the family, and Gina's disappearance has the whole area talking."

Chillingly, Castro quotes DeJesus' mother Nancy Ruiz.

"It's a shame that a tragedy had to happen for me to really know my neighbours. Bless their heart, they've been great.

"People are really looking out for my daughter."

Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, and Michele Knight went missing in 2003, 2004, and 2002, respectively.

Berry was abducted at age 16 in April 2003, DeJesus was taken at 14 in April 2004, and Knight was taken at age 21 in August 2002.

Berry, 27, DeJesus, 23, and Knight, 32, are being assessed and treated at MetroHealth Medical Centre.


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Branson's $99 million gamble on FIFOs

Sir Richard Branson and Virgin Australia CEO John Borghetti at Perth Airport unveiling our newest regional airline. PICTURES: Kerris Berrington Source: PerthNow

Sir Richard Branson and Virgin Australia CEO John Borghetti at Perth Airport unveiling our newest regional airline. PICTURES: Kerris Berrington Source: PerthNow

Sir Richard Branson and Virgin Australia CEO John Borghetti at Perth Airport unveiling our newest regional airline. PICTURES: Kerris Berrington Source: PerthNow

Sir Richard Branson and Virgin Australia CEO John Borghetti at Perth Airport unveiling our newest regional airline. PICTURES: Kerris Berrington Source: PerthNow

SIR Richard Branson has jetted into Perth to unveil his newly-branded aircraft after the $99 million takeover of regional airline Skywest.

The shamelessly self-promoting English billionaire and Virgin chief executive John Borghetti waved WA flags as they embarked from a freshly badged Fokker 100.

It's the first time the Virgin boss has been to the country since 2011, when he came for the re-branding of Virgin Blue to Virgin Australia.

The purchase of Skywest, a regional airline in WA that has operated for nearly 50 years flying to 16 destinations, is said to firmly cement the airline's footprint in the regional market. It also adds another 32 planes to Virgin's fleet.

Virgin Australia is now emblazoned on the Skywest fleet, which will fly to 41 destinations around the nation including lucrative fly-in, fly-out hubs.


Mr Borghetti said there was finally "some real competition'' in WA's regional air travel market for the first time since the demise of Ansett in 2001.

While conditions are currently tough in aviation, the company is committed to expanding, including by adding new destinations, he said.

"This isn't purely a Western Australian play - this is an Australia-wide play,'' Mr Borghetti said.

He dodged a question about stalled talks for a third runway at Perth airport, saying he wasn't going to get involved in politics.

But the facility hasn't kept up with high traffic growth over the past few years, so it is important to keep investing in infrastructure, Mr Borghetti.

"If you're not ahead of the wave, it comes back to bite you,'' Mr Borghetti warned.

Sir Richard chipped in, saying the airport was doing well compared to London's Heathrow, which was not investing enough in infrastructure.


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Perth braces for first storm of the season

Catch up with Channel 9's Sally Ayhan for local weather and a sneak peek into what to expect over the next 24 hours.

An intense low pressure system is set to deliver destructive winds and heavy rain to much of the southern half of WA.

PERTH and southern Western Australia is set to cop a battering tonight with wind gusts of more than 125km/h expected as part of a strong storm front.

The Bureau of Meteorology has issued severe weather warnings for towns from Geraldton in the north to Walpole in the far south of  the state as the first strong winter storm is set to lash the coast tonight and early tomorrow morning, bringing potentially destructive winds, heavy rain and thunderstorms.

The Department of Fire and Emergency Services (DFES) is urging people to drive safely and ensure their homes and families are prepared for dangerous weather.

The Bureau of Meteorology is forecasting two severe weather systems over western and southern parts of Western Australia beginning on Tuesday evening.

The wild weather is the product of two separate severe weather systems over western and southern parts of Western Australia beginning tonight, which will impact the state over the next 48 hours. 

The storm warning for the southern half covers people south-west of a line from Geraldton to Northam to Walpole, including the Perth metro area, Augusta, Busselton, Bunbury and Mandurah.

A Severe Weather Warning for damaging winds and high tides has also been issued north of Perth for people in the Central West districts.

Perth radar: Watch the storm front hit

"The passage of the strong cold front Tuesday evening and early Wednesday morning may cause localised dangerous gusts in excess of 125 kilometres per hour that could cause significant damage or destruction to homes or property," the Bureau warns.

"Thunderstorms and moderate to heavy falls are also possible. During Wednesday strong and squally winds are expected."

The southern capes, Leeuwin and Naturaliste are already being buffeted by strong gusty winds, up to 63km/h at Cape Leeuwin and 44km/h at Cape Naturaliste.

During Wednesday and Thursday a deep low will pass to the south of the state.

The low system is likely to produce the kind of weather that is only seen once or twice a year.

The weather expected today is typical for this time of the year but winds may cause localised damage to property and make road conditions hazardous.

The Department of Fire and Emergency Services advises that people should take precautions such as storing loose objects, prepare an emergency kit, secure boats, move vehicles undercover and make sure pets are in a safe area.

If your home or property has significant damage, such as a badly damaged roof or flooding, call the SES on 132 500.

Perth Forecast
Tuesday evening
Showers and a few storms.
Perth area - Cloudy. Showers. Scattered thunderstorms, possibly severe, in the northwest, extending throughout late this evening. Destructive winds possible. Winds northerly 20 to 25 km/h, increasing to 30 to 35 km/h in the late evening.

Wednesday

Summary - Min 16, Max 19. A few storms, heavy showers.
Cloudy. Heavy showers and scattered thunderstorms. Destructive winds possible early in the morning. Gusty winds during the day. Winds northerly 25 to 35 km/h decreasing to 15 to 25 km/h before dawn then increasing to 45 km/h before turning westerly 25 to 40 km/h during the day.

Thursday

Summary - Min 13, Max 21. Showers and chance of a storm.
Cloudy. Showers, easing for a period late morning to early afternoon. Isolated thunderstorms. Winds westerly 30 to 45 km/h.

Friday
Summary - Min 11, Max 18. Showers and chance of a storm.
Partly cloudy. Scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms. Winds westerly 25 to 40 km/h turning southwesterly 25 to 35 km/h during the morning then decreasing to 15 to 25 km/h during the afternoon.

Saturday
Min 11, Max 21. Shower or two clearing.
Partly cloudy. Scattered showers until late afternoon. Winds west to southwesterly 15 to 25 km/h tending southeast to southwesterly 15 to 20 km/h during the morning.

Sunday
Min 10, Max 21. Partly cloudy.
Partly cloudy. Winds east to southeasterly and light.

Monday
    Min 10
    Max 21
   Partly cloudy. Winds east to southeasterly and light.

Tuesday
    Min 10
    Max 23
   Partly cloudy. Winds easterly 15 to 20 km/h.


 


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Don't be fooled: The gluten-free con

Written By Unknown on Senin, 06 Mei 2013 | 21.51

Say YES to gluten! Picture: Thinkstock Source: Supplied

IT'S the stars' favourite food fad, but costly wheat-free products just make most people fatter - with no health benefits at all.

There's one celebrity craze that seems to be taking over the world. Whippet-thin stars including Victoria Beckham, Gwyneth Paltrow and Miley Cyrus all talk about their healthy "wheat-free" lifestyles. 

With their enviable figures, it's no wonder thousands of women are following their lead. But giving up bread, pizza, pasta and cakes, which all contain gluten - a gluey protein found in wheat, barley and rye - is not as easy as they make it seem, especially when you don't have a personal chef to whip you up tasty alternatives.

So over the past few years, the food industry, seeing a burgeoning gap in the market, have filled it with an ever-expanding range of "free from" products.

Walk into any supermarket and you'll find at least one aisle stacked with gluten-free foods - everything from fusilli pasta to fruity bars. Even sausages, usually bulked out with breadcrumbs, can be bought by people wanting to avoid gluten.

Of course, for people with coeliac disease, who are physically intolerant to products containing wheat, "free from" options make life a lot easier. But coeliacs can't be the only people buying them. According to the Food Standards Agency, only an estimated 1 per cent of the population is classified as coeliacs - yet this market is growing by 15 per cent every year and is worth $360 million annually. So what's the truth behind the boom?

The study

The authors of a recent paper in the British Medical Journal suggest that the surge in gluten-free living has come about because its products are not only sought by coeliacs, but by people watching their weight.

Ever since low-carbohydrate diets took the nation by storm ten years ago, carbs - which include bread, pasta, potatoes, starchy vegetables and rice - became a dirty word for anyone trying to shed the pounds.

But one ingredient in particular has come in for particular opprobrium. Some experts have claimed it's not carbohydrates as a whole that make some of us pile on the pounds, butcarbohydrates in the form of wheat - and, in particular, the protein called gluten contained within it.

Devotees, including Lady Gaga and Andy Murray, as well as Gwynnie, claim going gluten-free can alleviate everything from tiredness and bloating to spotty skin and hair loss. But are gluten-free products really as good for slimming as we think? Or could they actually be making us fatter, only reducing the size of our bank balances?

Shoppers keen to lose a few kilos may think gluten-free bread will give them a head start when it comes to dieting, but our investigation reveals the reverse could be true.

When manufacturers create a gluten-free product, they remove the wheat protein from the food by swapping wheat flour for another flour such as almond, rice, corn or even bean. However, this missing gluten makes it difficult for breads and bakery products to retain their shape and softness as they cook.

To alleviate this, additives (such as xanthum gum and hydroxypropyl methylcellulose) or corn starch are introduced. Extra sugar and fat are also added to the products to make them tastier. The result is that gluten-free bread can actually add pounds to your waistline.

Sarah Sleet, from Coeliac UK, agrees that, on the whole, "gluten-free fresh breads are higher in fat compared with breads containing gluten. This is largely because saturated fats are needed to make gluten-free bread soft".

She cautions that it's a myth to think that you'll lose weight by eating them.

"Going gluten-free does not necessarily make you healthier or lose weight," she says. "A gluten-free muffin or a normal muffin is still a muffin. It's still high in fat."

The subjects

The fattening side-effects of eating gluten-free products are familiar to 44-year-old Jo Smith, who runs a vintage clothing shop and lives with her artist partner Michael. She has put on 12 kilograms since going gluten-free.

"I went to the doctor about bloating and stomach pains ten years ago," she says. "They diagnosed IBS and didn't test for coeliac's disease - there just wasn't the awareness of the condition that there is today.

"I knew it was wheat causing my problems after I was left doubled over with pain one day when I"d eaten nothing but two sandwiches. From then, I stopped eating anything with wheat in it.

"But I'm living proof that going gluten-free won't help you lose weight. I've put on two stone (12kg) since coming off gluten - I used to be a small size eight to ten and now I'm a 12 to 14.

"Weight gain doesn't concern me, as even though I haven't been tested, I believe wheat was poisoning me. But it baffles me that someone who has no medical need to go gluten-free would choose to do so."

Claire Combes, 44, also piled on the pounds after going gluten-free.

"Five years ago, I found that when I ate food high in gluten, such as bread, pasta and potatoes, I felt bloated and tired," says Claire

"I wasn't overweight, but decided I'd switch to gluten-free products to see if this improved my health. I stocked up on gluten-free bread, spaghetti and pasta, as well as gluten-free snacks such as crisps and biscuits.

"These products were more expensive, but I felt they were worth it for their health benefits. I didn't have a clue they were higher in fats, and I had no idea they could make me put on weight, rather than lose it. Over the next few years, as I stuck to my gluten-free regime, my weight rose to 9 st 10 lb (63 kilograms).

"I couldn't understand it - I thought I was doing everything right; watching what I ate and eating a gluten-free diet. I also did Pilates and walked everywhere.

"Then I discovered from a friend that eating a gluten or wheat-free diet does not automatically make you slimmer. She recommended a more balanced and nutritious diet with more fresh food and veg.

"Following this, I have managed to drop to 8st 3lb (52 kilograms). I avoid any sort of bread - gluten-free or otherwise - and pasta."

As Claire points out, the other side of the free-from fad is that it's a money-spinner for food companies. Gluten-free products sell for a premium price.

The companies' justification for this is that demand is lower, making the cost of the materials and overheads for the products higher. There's also the expense involved in avoiding any cross-contamination with gluten, meaning that manufacturers usually need to set up dedicated factories and have specialist equipment.

The boom

So, if going gluten-free won't make us thinner or healthier, why are people adopting it in their thousands?

Books such as the New York Times bestseller Wheat Belly by William Davis could be part of the reason. Davis, a cardiologist, links our consumption of wheat to everything from schizophrenia to dandruff, diabetes and arthritis. He believes wheat is a "chronic poison" and even says it's as dangerous as heroin.

It all sounds a bit far-fetched - after all, the Western diet has included wholegrains since biblical times. Dr Davis, however, claims that much of the wheat found in our bread today is different to the type eaten by our grandparents.

Fifty years ago, scientists made a strain of "dwarf" wheat that grows twice as fast and is twice as hardy as traditional wheat. This variety is higher in gluten and, according to Dr Davis and other experts, is highly addictive - a claim rubbished by other nutritionists.

One of them is Ian Marber, who is deeply sceptical of the notion that wheat is bad for us. "The reason the vast majority of people think they feel better on a gluten-free diet is because they're suddenly making better choices.

"They are thinking about what they eat, reducing their overall carbo-hydrate intake and not going to fast-food restaurants.

"Obviously, you can do that without avoiding gluten. Selling this myth that gluten is as addictive as heroin or that it's this terrible poison simply treats people like idiots.

"I know of no biochemical evidence to support this. The problem is not that wheat is in some way flawed - it's that we eat too much of it. Our diet has become too carbohydrate-heavy. But cutting out wheat is not the panacea people think it is. Wheat has a bad reputation, but it's an important source of B vitamins, fibre and calcium."

What's more, as a coeliac, Ian says: "I find it strange that people might be following guidelines for a disease they don't have. The prevalence of food intolerances among the general public is criminally over-estimated.

"People eat a huge bowl of pasta, feel uncomfortable and then decide they are allergic. They're not - they've just eaten too much."

Of course, going gluten-free may appeal to dieters as a way of shifting the blame for their bad health. It's far easier to believe you have a medical problem than admit to yourself it's your fault you"re overweight. The irony is the "cure" to their perceived problem could be bad for them.

A study published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics last year concluded: "There is no evidence to suggest following a gluten-free diet has any significant benefits in the general population.

"Indeed, there is some evidence to suggest that a gluten-free diet may adversely affect gut health in those without coeliac disease or gluten sensitivity."

Perhaps the answer lies in finding the middle ground. If you're eating Weetbix for breakfast, a baguette for lunch and pizza for dinner, it's probably time to cut down and introduce more fruit and vegetables - but be aware that going gluten-free may not be the answer to your wellbeing or your waistline.

As Ian Marber says: "It's immoral that this industry has sprung up that is effectively selling us an illness most people don't suffer from.

"Going gluten-free has become an obsession that is denying people the real pleasure to be found in food." 


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Street rampage spooks WA designer

The brown car with occupants accused of terrorising pedestrians and residents in an Inglewood street. PICTURE: Supplied. Source: PerthNow

A GANG of five men has terrorised residents and the public in Inglewood this afternoon.

The rampage started at about 1pm when the gang attempted to break into a home but were disturbed by the mother of Perth fashion designer Steph Audino.
 
The startled mob then ran across the road and entered an elderly woman's home as she was outside watering her plants.
 
The woman confronted one of the gang, asking what he was doing in her home. He replied he was getting water for his car before fleeing.
 
The men then entered a brown vehicle and drove off down Crawford Road, where they threw beer bottles at a pedestrian from the car.
 
One pedestrian sought refuge in a home nearby.
 
Ms Audino said the ordeal caused her to be late in handing in her Perth Fashion Festival application.

 
"I was shaking I was so nervous,'' Ms Audino said.
 
A police spokesman said they have a description of the vehicle and were currently searching for it.
 
They have urged the public not to confront the gang and to call police if they are sighted.

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Storm warning ahead of strong front

Catch up with Channel 9's Sally Ayhan for local weather and a sneak peek into what to expect over the next 24 hours.

PERTH and southern Western Australia are set to cop a battering with wind gusts of more than 125km/h expected as part of a strong storm front.

The Bureau of Meteorology have issued a severe weather warning for people south-west of a line from Geraldton to Northam to Walpole, including the Perth metro area, Augusta, Busselton and Bunbury.

A strong cold front will move over the region during tomorrow evening before a deep low passes to the south of the state on  Wednesday.

The BoM warns that the storm may pack dangerous gusts of more than 125km/h, which could cause significant damage or destruction to homes or property.

Thunderstorms and moderate to heavy falls are also possible.

The Department of Fire and Emergency Services advises that people should take precautions such as storing loose objects, prepare an emergency kit and secure boats.

Perth Forecast
Tuesday 7 May
Summary - Min 15, Max 25. Showers, Late storms.
Perth area - Cloudy. Isolated showers, becoming widespread later in the evening, with the risk of a thunderstorm. Destructive winds possible during the evening. Winds north to northeasterly and light tending north to northwesterly 20 to 30 km/h in the morning then increasing to 35 to 50 km/h in the middle of the day.

Wednesday 8 May
Summary - Min 15, Max 19. Storms and heavy showers. Windy.
Perth area - Cloudy. Heavy showers and isolated thunderstorms. Winds northwesterly 40 to 55 km/h turning westerly 40 to 60 km/h in the evening.

Thursday 9 May
Summary - Min 14, Max 21. Showers, storm risk. Very windy.
Perth area - Cloudy. Isolated showers becoming more frequent in the evening, with the risk of a thunderstorm. Winds westerly 40 to 60 km/h.

Friday 10 May
Summary - Min 11, Max 19. Shower or two.
Perth area - Partly cloudy. Isolated showers. Winds westerly 25 to 35 km/h tending southwesterly 20 to 30 km/h during the day then becoming light during the evening.


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Mother breaks down over dead sons

A mother has wept in the Perth Coroner's Court while struggling to recall details of the day her two young sons died after she left them unattended in a shower for 10 hours.

Miranda Hebble outside the Perth Coroners Court, where an inquest into the deaths of her two sons is being investigated. Picture: Richard Polden Source: PerthNow

A MOTHER has wept in the Perth Coroner's Court while struggling to recall details of the day her two young sons died after she left them unattended in a shower for 10 hours.

The West Australian coroner is examining the deaths of Lochlan James Stevens, aged two, and Malachi Isaac Stevens, aged 10 months.

The boys died in November 2008 after their mother, Miranda Hebble, left them in the shower while she went to fetch something and fell asleep or passed out for 10 hours.

Ms Hebble told the inquest she struggled to remember a lot about that year because she was ashamed.

Recalling an occasion when she left five-week-old Malachi in the car while she returned a DVD, Ms Hebble said she only remembered being "very upset and distraught'' when she discovered police had arrived to rescue her son.

She said she had been very concerned by the incident and the involvement of the Department for Child Protection.

Ms Hebble held back tears as she explained that on the fateful day she put the boys in the shower, she saw "sparkles'' before passing out.

Coroner Alastair Hope questioned why she would put Malachi on the shower floor rather than somewhere she could hold him, and she replied she had a routine with the boys in the shower.

Ms Hebble said she had suffered dizzy spells from migraines and headaches in the past and usually held something to steady herself.

She said when she found the boys in the bathroom, the drain was blocked with toys and she tried to perform CPR.

Ms Hebble said she would cry when her partner was away and struggled as a young mother.

"I wanted to be strong. I wanted to prove I could do things,'' she said.

Although she had a supportive family, Ms Hebble said she did not have many friends and was not as sociable as her partner, who was a fly-in fly-out worker.

The young mother said she would often feel down and went shopping or visited her parents to make herself feel better but never showed her sadness to her family.

"I don't know why I was sad,'' she said.

Ms Hebble said she always felt tired and could catch up on sleep only when her partner was home.

Malachi had trouble sleeping and when he cried, he would wake up Lochlan, which made her sleep "erratic'', she said.

Ms Hebble said even when her partner was home, she struggled to sleep because she felt like she should be doing things around the house.

"I was ashamed. I was the mother,'' she said.


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'Tackle the root cause'

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 05 Mei 2013 | 21.51

Police Commissioner Karl O'Callaghan says WA's alcohol-related problems must be dealt with by legislation or changing the culture. Source: PerthNow

THE West Australian government is being implored to shut a legal loophole after a woman who was given a minimum six-month jail term for bashing a police officer walked free after just four months.

Pressure is mounting after The Sunday Times today revealed that ten WA police officers were assaulted during the last six days of April alone.

Sarah Blanchette was jailed late last year after being convicted of the attack on officer Wayne Godwin on New Year's Eve in 2011.

The attack in Perth's party district of Northbridge, which was caught by TV cameras, left Mr Godwin with severe bruising on the back of his head and recurring headaches.

Police Commissioner Karl O'Callaghan estimated there were 700 assaults on police each year but said it was just as important to tackle the root causes.

"I think we have got to deal with the alcohol-related problem in WA, either by legislation or culture," he told The Sunday Times.

"We have to go back to the genesis of the problem and attack it there."

"If I compare the officer's role today to my role as a constable 20 or 30 years ago, they are certainly facing a lot more violence on a day to day basis than we ever did.

"We didn't experience the same level of violence that we see these days. I don't think there's a single partner or mother or sister that doesn't worry when their police officer goes off to do their duty these days.

"There's been a change in the level of respect for all people in authority, not just police officer. But police officers face more violent situations than most."

Today PerthNow readers have expressed strong feelings about offences committed against police officers.

Peter of Bangkok: "Any type of assault on a police officer = 10 years jail with no parole of 7 years. It will stop overnight apart from the occasional maniac..."

Mary Perth of Perth: "We don't want to end up a police state, but the lack of respect shown in our community is disgusting. The WA Policeforce need to be shown in a positive proactive light, to protect and serve our community..."

Dave of Perth: "I don't condone violence and I think they do a good job but what did they expect when they signed up.....sitting in a vehicle holding a camera?"

Despite being given a nine-month jail sentence, including the mandatory six months introduced in WA for assaults on public officers, Blanchette was released on parole on April 16.

"The (parole) Board decided that Ms Blanchette's release would not present an unacceptable risk to the safety of the community due to the deterrent effect of her first term of imprisonment,'' a statement said.

Blanchette was eligible for release on parole because her total sentence was less than 12 months.

WA Police Union president George Tilbury said the decision made a mockery of the law mandating minimum jail terms for those who assaulted police.

"At the time, she was laughing and I am sure she will be laughing again because she has served less than half of the time she should have been serving,'' Mr Tilbury said.

"We are going to ask the attorney general and the police minister to look at this loophole as soon as possible.''

Perth Magistrates Court was told Blanchette hit the officer from behind, with witnesses describing how she laughed as she was arrested while the officer lay unconscious.

Ms Blanchette admitted hitting Sgt Godwin, but denied causing him bodily harm.

Magistrate Dianne Scaddan found her guilty, describing the attack as "a cowardly and disgraceful act''.


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City Link on track to early finish

The Perth City Link project. Workers laying the first rail lines in the now completed tunnel. Picture: Kerris Berrington Source: PerthNow

PERTH'S City Link project to sink the rail line dividing the CBD and Northbridge is on track and may even be completed early.

The $360million project - which will see the city and Northbridge linked with open space, commercial and residential development - is on track to open the new Fremantle tunnel by the end of July.

Transport Minister Troy Buswell, visiting the site today, said workers have begun laying the first section of the new track in the tunnel.

Mr Buswell said that while there had been projects in the past that had gone awry, like the Perth Arena, this project was travelling "very well."

"We've had some projects in the past like at the Arena which didn't go so well in terms of contract management and on time and on price," he said.


"But this is a great outcome here.

"All the indiciations are that we may even finish a little early, but best not to speculate on that."

The current Fremantle line will be closed after July when the new one is up and running.

Works are continuing at the Perth City Link project. Picture: Kerris Berrington Source: PerthNow


Work to sink the bus station underground will begin early next year and be completed by 2016.

"This is a massive project which is now someway through," Mr Buswell said.

"People are now starting to see how Perth will transform as a city."

Mr Buswell conceded there would continue to be delays in the city, mostly affecting traffic on Wellington and Roe Streets.

He thanked Perth people for being so patient during the many works going on across Perth.

"These transformational projects do have an impact on people's capacity to move around the city," he said.

"When we have a look at the 60 or so projects happening associating with works happening in the city.

"Yes, you don't transform a city without some impacts. I think most people understand the long-term benefits are going to be significant."

Troy Buswell looks over The Perth City Link project as Workers now laying the first rail lines in the now completed tunnel. ***POOL PICTURES*** Pictures:Michael Wilson Picture: Michael Wilson Source: PerthNow


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Boarder fix for asylum seekers

Caralyn Lagrange, who has signed up to rent out a room to an asylum seeker. Picture: Will Russell Source: PerthNow

MORE than 200 Australians, including 38 in WA, have signed up to rent out spare rooms to asylum seekers.

The Sunday Times last month revealed boat people would become live-in companions for retirees and "help out'' on farms under a new homestay scheme supported by the Immigration Department.

It is run by the Australian Homestay Network, which finds accommodation for asylum seekers who are released into the community on bridging visas while their refugee claims are assessed.

Executive chairman David Bycroft said yesterday the "great response'' from applicants proved the scheme was "definitely a goer'', with the first homestay placements to start in a fortnight.

Under the scheme, West Australians with a spare room are being urged to sign up for the Homestay Helping Hand program.

Hosts are paid $50 a week for each asylum seeker in exchange for providing board and food.

Asylum seekers, in return, "help out around the home or farm'', "pick up the shopping'', or "provide company for someone who's lonely''.

"We've had hundreds of responses and now we're going through them all to see who is suitable, but what we've proven without a doubt is that there is a market for this,'' Mr Bycroft said.

Among them is Perth's Caralyn Lagrange who has signed up to take an asylum seeker to help out at her 1.2ha, semi-rural property in Bedfordale.

Mr Bycroft said he had also had a flood of negative comments from Australians who would "rather sink the boats''.

"The positive applications have outweighed the negative, but the negative can be very cruel,'' he said.

"They are ignorant Australians who would rather sink the boats. They're at that level.''

"Our experience is that these asylum seekers are very, very genuine and hard-working and want to start a new life and do well. The good news is that many Australians have put up their hand to help out.''

The scheme is separate from another homestay program called the Community Placement Network, which started in May last year, but has stalled with just over 30 placements so far this year.

Mr Bycroft said thousands of asylum seekers would soon be living in the community  because the boats showed no sign of slowing, and putting up asylum seekers as boarders was a far better alternative to "conglomerated housing that comes with its own set of problems''

Coalition for Asylum Seekers, Refugees and Detainees spokeswoman Rosemary Hudson Miller welcomed the plan.


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Outrage over 'killing machine'

Dr Phillip Nitchske at the Wembley Community Centre in Perth. Picture: Theo Fakos Source: PerthNow

Fran Geste, a 71-year-old cancer sufferer, attended the community event. Picture: Theo Fakos Source: PerthNow

WA doctors' representatives last night tore into euthanasia advocate Philip Nitschke, accusing him of bringing a "killing machine'' into the state.

Dr Nitschke staged a Dying Well in the West workshop in Wembley yesterday, where he showcased his $660 nitrogen gas product.

Australian Medical Association president Richard Choong condemned the man dubbed Dr Death.

"He's teaching people how to use it but takes no responsibility,'' he said. "He's basically brought the gun, loaded it and put it on the table and said the fault is not mine.''

Eighty people attended the workshop, many interested in the nitrogen gas bottles sold by Dr Nitschke's brewing company, 'Max Dog Brewing'.

Dr Nitschke said since the product became available six months ago, more than 400 had been sold, including 10 in WA before the workshop.

One of those was to Murray Hindle, a member of the WA Voluntary Euthanasia Society.

The 71-year-old is not ill, nor is any member of his family, but he bought the product just in case "the worst happened''.

"The thing about nitrogen is that it is totally undetectable,'' he said.

Dr Nitschke hit back at his critics.

"I'm not encouraging anyone to do it or not to do it,'' he said. "What I am doing is telling you: 'This is what you can do'.

"If you don't give out that information, what you will be left with is a damning statistic in WA  that most elderly people who want to end their lives hang themselves.

"That is most common method in Perth 2013. That's an embarrassment and shame.''

Attendee Fran Geste, 71, was diagnosed with lymphoma 10 years ago.

"Having that dignity to die is the most important thing to me,'' she said.  "We should be permitted to have a say in how that happens.''

She said she would use Nembutal - the euthanasia drug of choice.

Dr Nitschke says it is still the easiest and most effective drug available. It's just illegal.

But that hasn't stopped dozens of seriously ill West Australians from importing the drug into the state from countries like China, he added.

"I have been testing Nembutal non-stop since I have got into Perth,'' he said

"We have done a run of about 10 today from people who have brought the drug and are worried whether or not it's pure.''

For people seeking support or feeling distressed call Lifeline 131 114, Mensline 1300 789 978 or Kids Helpline 1800 551 800.


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