Australia confirms two cases of new COVID-19 variant

Australian health officials on Sunday confirmed two cases of the new COVID-19 variant, Omicron.

The Eastern State of New South Wales’ Health Authority said in a statement its officials conducted urgent genomic testing and confirmed the new strain was present in two passengers who arrived in Sydney from Southern Africa on Saturday.

The statement read: “Both passengers came from southern Africa and arrived in Australia on a Qatar Airways flight via Doha.

“They tested positive for COVID-19 shortly after arriving, leading to an urgent analysis for possible infection by the heavily mutated Omicron strain.

The two positive cases, who were asymptomatic, are in isolation in the special health accommodation. Both people are fully vaccinated .

Another 12 passengers from Southern Africa in the same flight did not test positive for COVID-19 but have been placed in quarantine.

“About 260 passengers and crew on the plane have also been told to isolate.”

Magnitude 5.9 earthquake hits Melbourne, Australia

A magnitude 5.9 earthquake has struck Melbourne in southern Australia on Wednesday, according to Geoscience Australia.

In a tweet on Wednesday morning, the Victorian State Emergency Service’s said the earthquake‘s epicenter had been near Mansfield in the state of Victoria.

“Please be patient as lines may be busy,” the tweet said.

The Australian government had registered the earthquake at a magnitude of 6 but subsequently downgraded it slightly to 5.9. while the US Geological Survey also put the quake at magnitude 5.9.

According to the Emergency Services, the tembor was so strong it was felt as far away as Adelaide in South Australia, 800 kilometers (500 miles) away, and Sydney in New South Wales, more than 900 kilometers (600 miles) away.

Videos on social media showed at least one building suffered some minor damage and power lines disrupted in the central business district of Melbourne, Australia’s second largest city, where some people were seen on the streets following the quake.

In the video, residents described their shock and surprise as houses across the city began to shake, in a city which has not had an earthquake of a similar size in decades.

However, there have been no reports of injuries so far.

The country’s worst earthquake ever was in 1988 in the Northern Territory, which measured only 6.6 magnitude, according to Geoscience Australia.

Australia faces worst floods in 60 years, to evacuate thousands

Australian authorities planned to evacuate thousands of people from the flood-affected suburbs in the west of Sydney on Monday.

The country is facing its worst flooding in 60 years with drenching rain expected to continue for the next few days.

Persistent rains over the past three days caused an overflow of rivers in Australia’s most populous state of New South Wales (NSW), causing widespread damage and triggering calls for mass evacuations.

The NSW’s Premier, Gladys Berejiklian, who spoke on the development on Sunday, urged residents to brace up for a “very difficult week.”

She said: “Torrential rain which has submerged large swathes of NSW is in stark contrast to the weather conditions in the same regions a year ago when authorities were battling drought and catastrophic bush-fires.

“I don’t know any time in a state history where we have had these extreme weather conditions in such quick succession in the middle of a pandemic.”

Meanwhile, Sydney recorded the wettest day of the year with almost 111 mm (4.4 inches) of rain on Sunday.

Government data showed that some regions on NSW’s north coast received nearly 900 mm of rain in the last six days, more than three times the March average.

According to reports, an official of the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM), Jane Golding, said around 18,000 people have been evacuated from the low- lying areas of the state.

“Large parts of the country’s east coast will get hit by more heavy rains from Monday due to the combination of a tropical low over northern Western Australia and a coastal trough off NSW.

We expect this heavy rain to fall on areas that haven’t seen as much rain over the last few days, we expect the flood risk to develop in those areas as well,” Golding said.

The authorities also affirmed that some places in Sydney’s western regions have seen the worst flooding since 1961, and are expecting the wild weather to continue until Wednesday.

Amazing!!! Parrot saves Australian man from fire.

blue and yellow macaw perched on twig

Pet parrot saves Australian man from house fire

Anton Nguyen with his green parrot, Eric, stands outside his home in front of a fire truck
image captionAnton Nguyen with his parrot, Eric, after fleeing his house

An Australian man says he was able to survive a late-night house fire after his pet parrot roused him from bed.

Anton Nguyen had been fast asleep when his two-storey house caught alight in Brisbane, Queensland, on Wednesday.

“I heard a bang and Eric – my parrot – he started to yell so I woke up and I smelled a bit of smoke,” he told ABC.

“I grabbed Eric, opened the door and looked to the back of the house and saw some flames… and so I took off and bolted downstairs.”

By the time firefighters arrived at about 01:00 local time (14:00 GMT Tuesday), the house was engulfed in flames.

It took four crews over an hour to contain the blaze in the suburb of Kangaroo Point.

Mr Nguyen, who lives alone, said he had escaped with the bird and a bag, and suffered no injuries.

The green parrot had repeatedly squawked “Anton” to raise the alarm, said Queensland Fire and Emergency Services inspector Cameron Thomas.

“There were smoke detectors [but] the bird alerted before the smoke detectors went off,” he said.

The cause of the blaze is unknown and remains under investigation.

POLICE ARRESTS 44SUSPECTS AND RESCUES 16 CHILDREN

Australia child abuse: Police arrest 44 suspects and rescue 16 children

Police arresting a man in Sydney escort him into a police car
Police in Sydney arrest a man suspected of possessing child abuse material

Australian police have arrested 44 men across the nation on suspicion of possessing and producing child abuse material.

Sixteen children had been “removed from harm” in the process, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said.

The arrests followed a year-long investigation into images and videos that were shared online.

Arrests of the suspects – all aged between 19 and 57 – were made in every Australian state.

Police laid a total of 350 charges, all related to possessing or producing child exploitation material.

The men had allegedly used a cloud storage platform to share the abuse. The AFP described some evidence as among “the most abhorrent produced”.

Commissioner Reece Kershaw said identifying and rescuing victims was a “race against time” in such cases.

“Pixel by pixel, our investigators painstakingly look for clues and never give up,” he said.

Two police officers with a man in Adelaide

Hundreds of police and other specialists worked on the operation across Australia’s states and territories.

The arrests numbered 11 in Victoria, 11 in Queensland, nine in South Australia, eight in New South Wales, seven in Western Australia, five in Tasmania and one in the Australian Capital Territory.

The suspects worked in industries including construction, transport, law enforcement and hospitality.

Various electronic devices including USB sticks

“Children are not commodities and the AFP and its partner agencies work around-the-clock to identify and prosecute offenders,” Mr Kershaw said.

The AFP said it had rescued 134 children from child exploitation this year, including 67 who were not in Australia.