Tag Archives: oceania

Alarming number of Aussies chasing mates for money, figures reveal

Nearly two million people are owed money by a mate – and for many, it's not a small amount.

New research from financial comparison site Finder shows that almost one in ten Aussies are short-changed by a friend who hasn't repaid them.

The average owing sits at a staggering $1855, suggesting these aren't minor, one-off occurrences.

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Friends paying contactlessly in restaurant

Group gifts, restaurant bills, shared Ubers, event tickets and travel costs are among the repeat offenders.

Younger Australians are the most likely to be left in the lurch. The survey found that 12 per cent of Gen Z respondents are owed money, compared to 10 per cent of millennials and 8 per cent of Gen X.

Money expert Ceyda Erem said that while payment apps make it easier to settle up quickly and prevent one person from being left to pay, outstanding balances among friends can still cause friction.

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SYDNEY - DEC 29 2024:Pedestrians crossing a street in Sydney central business district in Sydney the capital city of New South Wales, Australia.

"While most debts between friends are relatively small, they can still add up and create frustration."

Etiquette expert Jo Hayes said to avoid an uncomfortable situation down the track, pay someone back straight away.

"Electronic bank transfers mean there's really no excuse for being tardy. Get their bank details and transfer the cash pronto.

"Don't put your friends and family in the awkward position of needing to chase you for the money."

For those wanting to recoup their losses, addressing the issue head on is the best place to start.

How to save at the supermarket checkout

"The first step is to directly ask for repayment. It might feel uncomfortable, but avoiding the conversation can lead to resentment over time," Erem said.

Erem explained that before offering to shout a meal for the table, it's important to consider your financial standing.

"Money is tight, and many simply can't afford to let these costs slide … it's important to make sure you're not putting your own financial wellbeing at risk."

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Ukrainian officials propose naming region after Donald Trump

Officials in Ukraine have discussed naming a disputed section of their country after Donald Trump, in a bid to win the US president's favour, the New York Times reports.

The as-yet-unofficial proposal would rebrand a highly fought-over section of the Donbas region "Donnyland".

The newspaper reported the name was suggested in jest, but is now being treated as a serious option to win over Trump.

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Donbas has been at the centre of bloodshed in the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The area is roughly 5200 square kilometres, and contains some of the bloodiest battlefields of Ukraine's war with Russia.

An estimated 190,000 people live in the proposed Donnyland, but that number may have been drastically reduced as a result of the war.

Who controls that section of Ukraine has been a sticking point in potential peace talks with Russia.

Russia has sought to create a demilitarised zone of the region which its police and national guard troops would be able to patrol.

Because Ukraine has built so many fortifications in the area, ceding that territory would weaken them if Russia sought to invade again.

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Donald Trump may have a region in Ukraine named after him.

The New York Times reported a Ukrainian negotiator used AI to generate a flag for Donnyland and a national anthem for the region.

The US president has not been asked about Donnyland and is yet to comment.

He does, however, have a long history of naming things after himself.

Ukraine and Russia have been locked in a stalemate in the war, with the front lines moving little in the past two years.

But Ukraine is touting the massive losses Russia has taken since the invasion began.

This week, Ukraine's Department of Defence claimed Russia has lost an average of 254 soldiers for every square kilometre they have occupied.

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A Ukrainian soldier fires a rocket launcher in the Donbas region.

In Donetsk, the number is 428 soldiers per square kilometre.

Russia has been cagey about its casualties in the war, but Ukraine claims the invaders have suffered 1.2 million deaths and injuries.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said earlier this month that 35,000 Russian troops had been killed or wounded in March alone, a record monthly high.

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Unseasonable autumn heat grips multiple states

A wave of pre-winter warmth will sweep across southern Australia this week.

Adelaide, Melbourne and Hobart are all facing a run of days above 20 degrees leading into the weekend.

Adelaide's top temperatures will run to 27 or 28 degrees from today until Sunday, when it drops again.

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Melbourne will be slightly cooler but will top out in the mid-20s until next week.

Hobart, too, will run to the low to mid 20 degree range until Monday.

Weatherzone reported these temperatures were solidly above the monthly average for Adelaide (22.2 degrees), Melbourne (20.4 degrees), and Hobart (17.5 degrees).

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"South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania are all being impacted by northerlies circulating anti-clockwise around the (high pressure system), dragging warm air southwards from the interior of the continent," Weatherzone said.

"This pattern will remain in place for several days as the high drifts east."

Dry conditions in those areas are also expected for the rest of the week.

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Fresh Ivan Milat link explored in murder highway mystery

A new documentary has drawn a fresh link between notorious serial killer Ivan Milat and the unsolved 1972 murder of Melbourne teenager Robin Hoinville-Bartram and the disappearance of her friend Anita Cunningham.

Hoinville-Bartram and Cunningham, both 18, were hitchhiking from Melbourne to Queensland when they vanished.

In November 1972, railway workers found Hoinville-Bartram's body under a bridge on the Flinders Highway, about 250 kilometres west of Townsville. She had been shot twice in the head at close range and was naked from the waist down. Cunningham has never been found.

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Melbourne teenager Robin Hoinville-Bartram, left, and her friend Anita Cunningham.

Milat, who died in 2019 protesting his innocence, was convicted of murdering seven backpackers in Belangalo State Forest, in the NSW Southern highlands.

But many, including detectives who brought him to justice, believe he could have killed scores more.

NSW Legalise Cannabis MP Jeremy Buckingham, who has been using parliamentary mechanisms to probe the true extent of Milat's crimes, told Outback Murder Highway – a four-part series investigating unsolved murders and disappearances along the Flinders Highway – that he believes Hoinville-Bartram and Cunningham could be among the serial killer's earliest victims.

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"What we need to do is look at Ivan Milat's life, look at the opportunity he had to commit a crime," Buckingham said.

"Where was he? What was he doing? Were there crimes in those areas at that time that fit his modus operandi? And the answer is yes."

Taskforce Air was established shortly after the first bodies were discovered in Belangalo Forest in 1993.

With Milat yet to enter the police's sights and with few suspects, the task force examined similar unsolved murders nationwide that could have been committed by the same killer.

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The Outback Murder Highway team visit Sensible Creek.

The previously unpublished list, obtained in parliament by Buckingham, contained 58 names, including Hoinville-Bartram and Cunningham.

Milat was in his late twenties at the time Hoinville-Bartram and Cunningham disappeared.

Jeremy Buckingham MP said the circumstances of the women's disappearance, including their age, the fact they were hitchhiking when they disappeared, and the sexual assault and execution of Hoinville-Bartram, bore striking similarities to the crimes for which Milat was convicted.

Former Queensland detective Brendan Rook pointed out that among Milat's seven known victims were three couples.

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Robin Jeanne Hoinville-Bartram, 19, and her college friend Anita Cunningham, set off from Melbourne in 1972.

"We see a pattern of behaviour where he abducts more couples than he does individuals," Rook said.

"You don't have too many serial killers abducting couples."

Milat's preference for couples was evident decades before the backpacker murders. In 1971, a year before Hoinville-Bartram and Cunningham disappeared, Milat picked up two 18-year-old hitchhikers, assaulted one at knifepoint and threatened to kill the other.

The pair escaped, and Milat was later charged but acquitted.

Buckingham says very little is known about Milat's whereabouts between 1971 and 1974, but he was aware of evidence Milat fled to Queensland after the failed prosecution.

An eyewitness account aired in the documentary adds to the suspicion.

In 2003, witness Merle Whyte told Crimestoppers she met the two women in July 1972 at the Pentland Hotel, 15 kilometres from where Hoinville-Bartram's body was later found.

Whyte recalled seeing the pair socialising with a man they called "Cowboy", before accepting a lift with the man to Charters Towers.

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Robin Hoinville-Bartram (far right) and Anita Cunningham (centre) disappeared in 1972.

Decades later, Whyte recognised Milat on television as the same man.

Whyte's family claims police dismissed her account. But Buckingham said Milat had a lifelong strange fascination with cowboy attire.

"Who, as an adult, dresses up as a cowboy? Ivan Milat did. He did it his whole life," he said.

Although Milat lived in NSW and his known victims were murdered in the Belangalo Forest, Buckingham said the killer was highly mobile, working at various times on a road gang and as a truck driver in Queensland, and could therefore be responsible for murders across the country.

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190516 Ivan Milat Sydney Hospital jail transfer Goulburn Prince of Wales medical tests scans crime news NSW Australia

If proven, Milat's connection to the Flinders Highway will underscore its deadly reputation.

Since the 1970s, eleven people, including Hoinville-Batram and Cunningham, have been murdered or vanished along the remote 900km stretch of road.

Outback Murder Highway, a four-part documentary series investigating a cluster of unsolved murders and disappearances along the Flinders Highway, airs on Nine, which is also the publisher of this website, tonight.

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Neil wants pokies machines to play ‘losing sounds’. Here’s why

During a Christmas lunch with mates, Neil Walshe reluctantly shuffled into a pokies room.

Nothing was amiss: Flashing lights and high-pitched slot machine jingles are a common backdrop to pub meals in Australia.

But then came a startling realisation.

"As they always do, my mates say, 'We're going to go and have a slap', and so I walked in the room with them," Walshe recalled to Nine.com.au.

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Neil Walshe losing sounds pokies

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Emotional reunion after beloved dogs disappear for five weeks

Two cheeky dogs have been found after a wild five-week adventure in South Australia's Murraylands saw them face the elements and battle kangaroos.

Rupert and Finni often go wandering in their backyard.

It usually starts with one going next door to fetch the other and ends with them biting off more than they can chew, such as taking on kangaroos.

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Cody and Finni (left), Rupert and Ben (right)c

But things took a different turn in March when Ben Dunbar's attempts to find the dogs went unanswered by his next door neighbour, Chris Scanlon.

"I found him passed away in the paddock, and hence that's why the dogs had run away and disappeared," Dunbar said of Chris' shock death.

Signs and searches for the lost dogs didn't bring the pets any closer to home.

Hope wore thin as the weeks drew on, until a Facebook post pointed Dunbar to a nearby but largely empty island on the River Murray.

Rupert

This prompted one final three-hour search in a dinghy and on foot.

"Then just out of the blue, Rupert just popped out of nowhere, I was nearly in tears," Dunbar recalled.

Both dogs were there – starving and a little withdrawn but alive. Finni was covered in the unmistakable signs of kangaroo warfare but home at last.

In these parts of the state, devices that pick up signals for trackers to send a location are few and far between.

Even if they did work, Rupert somehow found a way to lose two collars during the adventure anyway.

Finni

"It's been a bit of a bizarre five weeks to be honest with finding Chris and both of the dogs missing, there's kind of been a bit of an emptiness," Dunbar said.

With the passing of Chris, Finni will now stay with his son, Cody, in Mannum, almost 40 kilometres away.

But the distance won't keep them apart for long.

"Looking at him it just reminds me of the good times that he had with my dad and I had with my dad and all the family," Scanlon said.

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Millions of dollars in AI camera fines wiped

Thousands of West Australian drivers have successfully appealed artificial intelligence-based camera infringements, wiping $2.2 million in fines.

But as pressure mounts to press pause on the controversial cameras, the government says it's going to roll out even more.

Over the past six months more than 54,000 infringements have been issued to WA drivers for incorrectly wearing a seatbelt or not wearing one at all.

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WA AI camera fines wiped

The acts have been caught by AI cameras, with new data revealing nearly $10 million in fines have been issued since they officially launched in October.

Perth father Steven Shaw is one of those fined.

Over a two-month period, between December and January, his passenger was caught four times by AI cameras improperly wearing her seatbelt on the freeway.

"When you're driving 100[km/h] down the freeway, there's no safe way you can safely monitor a passenger's seatbelt location without potentially causing an accident," Shaw told 9News.

WA AI camera fines wiped

But, as the driver, he was hit with more than $2000 in fines and 20 demerits, starting a four-month battle and putting his livelihood at stake.

"There was two or three weeks where I didn't know if I'd lost my licence, I was in limbo and my wife driving much of the time," Shaw said.

Shaw challenged his infringements, with the Department of Transport withdrawing all but the first one, which he'll contest in court.

The father is one of 2800 drivers who've successfully appealed their infringement notices, wiping $2.2 million in fines.

"AI cameras in my opinion are not suitable for this form of infringement, they are for speeding and phones," Shaw said.

WA AI camera fines wiped

WA Premier Roger Cook said it's not the AI cameras' fault but that the driver gets clocked multiple times in a short window.

"People are often getting penalised once, twice or three times before they're even aware that a fine has been raised in their name," Cook said.

Despite the AI camera backlash, the WA government plans to roll out even more within the next six months.

The opposition says the government needs to iron out the issues before launching more.

"The government haven't gotten it right," Opposition Leader Basil Zempilas said.

"It needs to be tweaked and they need to get it right before more fines are issued."

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