Whanganui’s Josephine (Josie) Hepi-Hika was 35 weeks pregnant when she was diagnosed with two strands of stage 4 cancer – Burkitt’s lymphoma leukaemia and lymphoma – at the beginning of April.Doctors made the decision to induce…
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Morrison government to spend $600 million on new Hunter Valley gas power plant
The Morrison government will spend up to $600 million to build a new gas power plant in the NSW Hunter Valley.
The government says the plant, scheduled to come online in summer 2023-24 to replace the coal-fired Liddell power plant following its 2023 closure, will keep NSW energy prices down.
But the announcement came after some experts questioned whether the major investment made commercial sense and on the same day the International Energy Agency called for an end in new coal mines, oil and gas wells.
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With money committed in the 2020-21 Federal Budget, Snowy Hydro Limited will be tasked with constructing the 660 MW open-cycle gas turbine at Kurri Kurri, creating up to 600 jobs during peak construction.
The government promised to back the plant, if power generators failed to do so, when announcing its "gas-led recovery" from the coronavirus last year.
On Tuesday, Energy and Emissions Reduction Minister Angus Taylor said the government had given the private sector every opportunity to act.
"Cheap power is crucial to ensuring families, businesses and job-creating industries in NSW can thrive, which is why we are committed to replacing the energy generated by Liddell to keep prices down," he said in a statement.
"This important project is good news for NSW as well as the broader National Electricity Market.
"We were very clear from the start – we will not stand by and watch prices go up and the lights go off."
Mr Taylor said the multimillion-dollar project was a responsible investment expected to deliver "strong returns".
READ MORE: US 'watching Australia's back' amid China trade tensions
But Kerry Schott, chair of Australia's Energy Security Board, told The Guardian the private sector wasn't building the plant because gas was "expensive power" and the project "doesn't stack up".
"One of the reasons given for [a taxpayer-funded plant in the Hunter] is it will flood the market with gas-fired power and when there's a tonne of supply in the market, prices go down," she said.
"We all learned this in economics. However, that doesn't work when there are a whole lot of other things around that are cheaper in price, like wind, solar and big batteries, like pumped hydro and we've got Snowy 2.0 coming."
University of Melbourne energy expert Dylan McConnell told Nine newspapers last week the plant could operate at less than 2 per cent capacity, based on figures contained in an environmental impact statement for a 750-megawatt plant on the site.
Calls for end to new fossil fuel supply investments
In a report released shortly before the government's announcement, the International Energy Agency said it had determined there was a narrow but viable pathway for building a global energy sector with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
Several countries, including the United States and the European Union, have pledged to achieve net-zero emissions — meaning only as much planet-warming gas is released into the atmosphere as can be absorbed — by mid-century.
Australia is yet to commit to net-zero by 2050 or improve on its 2030 target of cutting emissions by 26 to 28 per cent of 2005 levels, which have been described as "insufficient".
The IEA report sets out 400 steps needed to transform how energy is produced, transported and used.
These include no investment in new fossil fuel supply projects, an end to the sale of new internal combustion engine passenger cars by 2035, and a four-fold increase in the deployment of solar and wind power by 2030 compared to last year's record level.
IEA executive director Fatih Birol said the transformation would create millions of new jobs and boost economic growth worldwide.
But he warned while countries and companies had begun to set bold targets for cutting emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the coming decades, actual emissions continued to rise substantially.
The IEA said last month that 2021 would see the second-largest annual increase in emissions since 2010 as the world economy bounces back from the pandemic.
"There is a growing gap between the rhetoric we hear from governments and industry leaders, and what it happening in real life," Mr Birol said.
The agency, whose 30 members are mostly in North America, Europe and East Asia, said the power sector needed to lead the way, with electricity generation achieving net-zero by 2035 in advanced economies and worldwide five years later.
"Beyond projects already committed as of 2021, there are no new oil and gas fields approved for development in our pathway, and no new coal mines or mine extensions are required," it said.
Dave Jones, an analyst at the energy think tank Ember, said the report's recommendation mark a turnaround from the IEA's past position and were "truly a knife into the fossil fuel industry."
Mr Taylor said the government had also announced almost $25 million to make new gas generators hydrogen-ready.
Strike from Gaza kills two as Israel topples six-storey building
A strike launched from Gaza killed two Thai workers inside a packaging plant in southern Israel on Tuesday, police said, hours after Israeli airstrikes toppled a six-storey building in the Palestinian territory that housed bookstores and educational centres.
With the war between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers showing no sign of abating and truce efforts apparently stalled, Palestinians across Israel and the occupied territories went on strike in a rare collective action against Israel's policies. The general strike and expected protests could further widen the conflict after a spasm of communal violence in Israel and protests across the occupied West Bank last week.
Since the fighting began last week, the Israeli military has launched hundreds of airstrikes it says are targeting Hamas' militant infrastructure, while Palestinian militants have fired more than 3400 rockets from civilian areas in Gaza at civilian targets in Israel.
READ MORE: Biden expresses 'support' for cease-fire in Netanyahu call
The latest attack from Gaza on Tuesday hit a packaging plant in a region bordering the territory. In addition to the two people killed, who were in their 30s, Israel's Magen David Adom rescue service said it transported another seven wounded people to the hospital.
Israel continued its airstrikes into Gaza, leaving behind a massive mound of rebar and concrete slabs in its attack on the six-storey building that housed bookstores and educational centres used by the Islamic University and other colleges. Desks, office chairs, books and computer wires could be seen in the debris. Residents sifted through the rubble, searching for their belongings.
Israel warned the building's residents ahead of time, sending them fleeing into the predawn darkness, and there were no reports of casualties.
"The whole street started running, then destruction, an earthquake," said Jamal Herzallah, a resident of the area. "This whole area was shaking."
READ MORE: Israel strikes Gaza tunnels as truce efforts remain elusive
Since 2012, Hamed al-Ijla had run a training centre in the building, teaching first aid, hospital management and other skills to thousands of students. The only things remaining were a pile of red first aid bags, medical coats wrapped in plastic and one box of surgical gloves.
When the war is over, "I will set up a tent across the street and resume work," he said.
Heavy fighting broke out May 10 when Gaza's militant Hamas rulers fired long-range rockets toward Jerusalem in support of Palestinian protests against Israel's heavy-handed policing of the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, a flashpoint site sacred to Jews and Muslims, and the threatened eviction of dozens of Palestinian families by Jewish settlers.
At least 213 Palestinians have been killed in airstrikes since, including 61 children and 36 women, with more than 1440 people wounded, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not break the numbers down into fighters and civilians. Twelve people in Israel, including a 5-year-old boy and a soldier, have been killed in the ongoing rocket attacks.
The fighting is the most intense since a 2014 war between Israel and Hamas, but efforts to halt it have so far stalled. Egyptian mediators are trying to negotiate a cease-fire, but the US has stopped short of demanding an immediate stop to the hostilities and Israel has so far vowed to press on.
As the fighting drags on, medical supplies, fuel and water are running low in Gaza.
Palestinians in Israel, east Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank observed a general strike Tuesday. It was a rare show of unity among Palestinian citizens of Israel, who make up 20 per cent of its population, and those in the territories Israel seized in 1967 that the Palestinians have long sought for a future state of their own. Life had already ground to a halt in Gaza when the fighting began.
The strike was intended to protest the Gaza war and Israeli policies that many activists and some rights groups say constitute an overarching system of apartheid that denies Palestinians the rights afforded to Jews. Israel rejects that characterisation, saying its citizens have equal rights. It blames the war on Hamas, the Islamic militant group that controls Gaza, and accuses it of inciting violence across the region.
Leaders of the Palestinian community in Israel called the strike, which was embraced by the internationally-backed Palestinian Authority in the occupied West Bank, where ministries and schools were closed. Most businesses appeared to be observing the strike, and protests were expected.
Muhammad Barakeh, one of the organisers of the strike, said Palestinians are expressing a "collective position" against Israel's "aggression" in Gaza and Jerusalem, as well as the "brutal repression" by police across Israel.
The war has also seen an unusual outbreak of violence in Israel, with groups of Jewish and Palestinian citizens fighting in the streets and torching vehicles and buildings. In both Israel and the West Bank, Palestinian protesters have clashed with Israeli forces.
The Israeli military said Tuesday it fired at 65 militant targets, including rocket launchers, a group of fighters and the homes of Hamas commanders that the army said were being used for military purposes. It said more than 60 fighter jets took part in the operation.
The military said it also shot down a drone "approaching the Israeli border" in the northeast, far from the Gaza fighting. It did not say where the unmanned aircraft originated, but it's possible the drone came from Syria.
The military said Palestinian militants fired 90 rockets, 20 of which fell short into Gaza. Israel says its missile defences have intercepted about 90 per cent of the rockets.
Israel's strikes have brought down several buildings and caused widespread damage in the narrow coastal territory, which is home to more than 2 million Palestinians and has been under an Israeli-Egyptian blockade since Hamas seized power from rival Palestinian forces in 2007.
Hamas and Islamic Jihad say at least 20 of their fighters have been killed in the fighting, while Israel says the number is at least 160 and has released the names of and photos of more than two dozen militant commanders it says were "eliminated."
Israeli attacks have damaged at least 18 hospitals and clinics and entirely destroyed one health facility, the World Health Organisation said in a new report. Nearly half of all essential drugs in the territory have run out.
It said the bombing of key roads, including those leading to the main Shifa Hospital, has hindered the movement of ambulances and supply vehicles. Over 41,000 displaced Palestinians have sought refuge in UN schools in Gaza, which was already struggling to cope with a coronavirus outbreak. Gaza is also running low on fuel for its electricity supply and water.
Israel has vowed to press on with its operations, and the United States signalled it would not pressure the two sides for a cease-fire even as President Joe Biden said he supported one.
"We will continue to operate as long as necessary in order to return calm and security to all Israeli citizens," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said after meeting with top security officials on Monday .
The Biden administration has declined so far to publicly criticise Israel's part in the fighting or send a top-level envoy to the region. On Monday, the United States again blocked a proposed UN Security Council statement calling for an end to "the crisis related to Gaza" and the protection of civilians, especially children.
Among the buildings that Israeli airstrikes have levelled was the one housing The Associated Press Gaza office and those of other media outlets.
Netanyahu alleged that Hamas military intelligence was operating inside the building. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Tuesday that Israel had given the US information about the bombing. Israel has not publicly provided any evidence of its claim.
Blinken, speaking from Iceland, declined to characterise the material received.
AP President Gary Pruitt reiterated the organisation's call for an independent investigation into the attack.
"As we have said, we have no indication of a Hamas presence in the building, nor were we warned of any such possible presence before the airstrike," he said in a statement. "We do not know what the Israeli evidence shows, and we want to know."
Health workers 'thrown under the bus' over children's hospital death
Four medical workers involved in the treatment of a seven-year-old girl who died at Perth Children's Hospital after a "cascade of missed opportunities" to help her have been reported to regulators.
A comprehensive report into Aishwarya Aswath's tragic Easter Saturday death, exclusively revealed by 9News, described a litany of mistakes and errors in her treatment.
Now three nurses and a doctor who were working that night have been reported to the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, leaving doctors and nurses unions fuming.
READ MORE: Aishwarya's parents demand hospital reform
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One of the three nurses was stood down on full pay on Monday night.
"What's happened to the bureaucrats? What's happened to those who made the decision to do stand by and do nothing?" Australian Nursing Federation state secretary Mark Olson said.
AMA WA president Mark Olson said his organisation would not allow the most junior staff doing the most difficult jobs to be "thrown under the bus".
"We have to get out there and protect those junior staff from what is essentially an arse-covering exercise from the minister, the DG (director-general of the health department), and the senior executive of PCH," he said.
Premier Mark McGowan and Health Minister Roger Cook continue to say staffing issues on the night were not a problem.
"The emergency department was staffed above its complement. It was staffed above what is normally there," Mr McGowan said.
READ MORE: Aishwarya's parents demand hospital reform
READ MORE: Schoolgirl 'should have had more help'
But the report into Aishwarya's death found problems with the structure of staffing. It pointed out that in October last year, emergency department staff met with the Perth Children's Hospital executive to air concerns around the safety of children in waiting rooms.
Those fears were raised again in December and as recently as March nurses wrote to their union boss because nothing had been addressed.
"We have grave concerns regarding staffing levels and safety," they wrote.
"There have been several incidents resulting in significant harm to patients.
"Many colleagues feel anxious they cannot deliver adequate care."
Mr McGowan said his health minister was advised the appropriate processes were in place but said the government would now seek to improve them.
First review: Apple's new iMacs – the ultimate family computer
Four weeks ago when Apple held their first product announcement event of 2021 one of the most unexpected announcements was a range of new iMac computers. Available in seven colours, featuring Apple's own M1 Processor, it looked like it would tick all the boxes. With a week of usage under my belt, I can tell you – it does.
Normally we'd say "out of the box" and give an impression. The new iMac impresses you in the box.
Environmentally focused, there's no big chunky Styrofoam holding this all together, instead the cardboard mechanics allowing the box to hinge apart to expose your new iMac.
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Then, you pick it up and it's lightweight like no other all-in-one PC. And once you rip off all the protective layers, it's beautiful.
Seven colours is a lot of options. The Green I'm using is a unique green, and I expect that's the same for all the colours. There is guaranteed to be an iMac to suit your home or office.
Great for Families
And that's the thing about this computer, it is equally suited to home or work, but I really believe this is the ultimate family computer for a family who have just the one computer, but multiple users.
Enter TouchID – something first present on the iPhone, now on iPads and MacBooks – and finally the Apple keyboard contains a TouchID sensor allowing fast login, or fast approval of your ApplePay purchase.
Critically the TouchID is also a link to your own computer account. Each member of the family can register their fingerprint, and by scanning your finger, you're asking the iMac to switch to your login.
That very feature has changed things massively for my kids as they jump in one after the other to do their homework or typing practice.
Made for the work-from-home era
There's one feature on the new iMac that is surprisingly unique – a Full HD web camera. The front-facing camera on the iMac is now 1080p and that means better quality Zoom calls in an era when that's absolutely a priority.
It's unique because it's actually quite rare still today, despite 1080 being a video format for many years, and video conferencing being hardly new, that resolution is normally reserved only for external web cameras.
Plus, the microphone array and speaker system are excellent too. Three microphones and six speakers mean the quality of both your video conferences and your everyday listening will be a class above.
Apple's own Silicon
I think the idea of Apple Silicon is lost on most, but in simple terms, there ain't no "Intel Inside" – instead Apple has built it's own M1 processor which now sits inside it's newest MacBooks, this iMac and the upcoming iPad Pro.
I found the performance of the M1 in day-to-day use to be outstanding. Apps launch almost instantly, the iMac powers on fast, and you never really feel yourself waiting or being left wanting.
For 99 per cent of home users there will be no compatibility issues with the software you run. Personally, I'm still waiting for the full Adobe Suite to get upgraded to M1 compatibility but I think that's a rarity in the family home or small office scenario.
Typical Apple: You're going to need more
We've already got a dongle hanging down the back of the iMac to act as an SD Card reader. The iMac features 4 USB-C connectors, two of them are USB-3 and two of them are Thunderbolt. On the entry level iMac it's just two Thunderbolt connections.
That means you're going to need a Dongle for your standard (rectangular) USB-A plugs, and for your SD cards. Ethernet isn't missing, it's actually connected via the Power brick which is a stroke of genius.
How much is the new Apple iMac
The standard iMac 24 inch is $1,899, it does not feature TouchID on the keyboard, and has a 7 core GPU.
Price it up, and you get an 8 Core GPU, the full 4 USB-C connections and Touch ID for $2,199 – double the storage to 512GB for $2,499.
Person dies after crash between car and pedestrian on State Highway 2 in Wellington
A person has died following a crash between a car and a pedestrian in the Lower Hutt suburb of Belmont.The incident occurred on State Highway 2, Western Hutt Road near Grounsell Crescent.The person died at the scene.Police were…
Melbourne mother told police she feared her son before her death
A Melbourne woman who was allegedly murdered by her son had told police she did not feel safe around him.
Thomas Bednar was arrested and charged yesterday after the discovery of 78-year-old Judy Bednar's body inside her Chelsea home about 10.30am.
Homicide Squad detectives arrested the 53-year-old man near his home, which was in close proximity to his mother's house.
READ MORE: Huge blaze engulfs Melbourne home
CCTV from Ms Bednar's home has revealed tense conversations between the mother and son.
"Hello Judy, I would like to know why you lied last year to say I was crazy," Mr Bedner said in a video of one of their last altercations.
"She slams the door in my face and walks away."
https://twitter.com/LanaMurphy/status/1394556274939863041
The Chelsea woman's friends called police after she had not been seen for several days.
Mr Bednar is an only child and previously worked as a taxi driver and published a book.
A diagnosed schizophrenic, he lived alone, 750 metres from his mother.
Ms Bednar's neighbours have expressed their sadness at the loss of the Holocaust survivor.
"She was a nice lady," family friend Ilana Cohen told 9News.
"My heart breaks for what happened to her, that's terrible."
9News has confirmed Ms Bednar had asked police for protection a week before her death.
She'd shared vision captured on her CCTV over concerns for her safety.
Her son refused to face a magistrate in an after hours court hearing last night.
Mr Bednar has never been in custody before and will return to court in October.
Flick of the switch that will cut down winter heating costs
Experts have revealed a simple flick of the switch on household fans could lead to significant savings across Australia this winter, among other tips to keep costs down.
Generally found on the side of a fan motor, the small switch reverses the direction the blades travel in, pushing all the hot air that rises down and throughout the room.
While it may seem like a small change, it's a feature that consumer group Choice says can halve your winter heating bill.
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"We've done some tests, and we've got some heat map photos to show – it really makes a surprising difference," Chris Barnes from Choice told 9News.
With most household fans being cheap to run, the reverse mode means that heaters have to do less work to maintain at a constant temperature.
Experts have also suggested that households keep their windows and excess doors to empty rooms closed, as well as washing clothes at non-peak hour times and turning off extra fridges used during summer.
Other tools like door stops and sealing tape can be used to optimise your home temperatures during the cooler months, all of which can be brought from local hardware stores.
"We're all going to be heating our homes to some extent, so the question is how do we mitigate that energy usage," Simon Downes from Compare the Market told 9News.
"There's an opportunity right now for consumers to have a plan in place for how they're going to use energy this winter."
Biden expresses 'support' for Israel-Gaza ceasefire
US President Joe Biden expressed support for a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza's militant Hamas rulers in a call to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu today, the eighth day of airstrikes and rocket barrages that have killed at least 200 people, most of them Palestinians in Gaza.
Mr Biden stopped short of joining the growing demands from Democrats and others for an immediate ceasefire in the fighting.
But the White House readout of the call showed increased White House concern that the fighting – including Israeli airstrikes aimed at weakening Hamas – come to an end, while still expressing support for Israel.
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The US leader also "encouraged Israel to make every effort to ensure the protection of innocent civilians," according to a White House readout.
As the worst Israeli-Palestinian fighting since 2014 raged, the Biden administration had previously limited its public criticisms to Hamas and declined to send a top-level envoy to the region, or press Israel publicly and directly to wind down its latest military operation in the Gaza Strip, a 10km-by-40km territory that is home to more than two million people.
Ceasefire mediation by Egypt and others have shown no sign of progress.
The US, Israel's top ally, also blocked for a third time what would have been a unanimous statement by the 15-nation UN Security Council expressing "grave concern" over the intensifying Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the loss of civilian lives.
The final US rejection killed the Security Council statement, at least for now.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki and national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the US was focusing instead on "quiet, intensive diplomacy".
The US administration's publicly tempered response comes despite calls from Security Council partners, some Democrats and others for Mr Biden' and other international leaders to wade more deeply into diplomacy to end the worst Israel-Palestinian violence in years and revive long-collapsed mediation for genuine peace there.
Speaking in Copenhagen, where he was making an unrelated tour of Nordic countries, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken ticked off other, quieter US outreach so far to try to de-escalate hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel and said he would be making more calls today.
"In all of these engagements we have made clear that we are prepared to lend our support and good offices to the parties should they seek a cease-fire," Mr Blinken said.
He said he welcomed efforts by the UN, Egypt and other nations working for a cease-fire.
READ MORE: Israel strikes Gaza tunnels as truce efforts remain elusive
"Any diplomatic initiative that advances that prospect is something that we'll support," he said.
"And we are again willing and ready to do that. But ultimately it is up to the parties to make clear that they want to pursue a cease-fire."
Pulling back from Middle East diplomacy to focus on other policy priorities — such as Mr Biden's emphasis on dealing with the rise of China — carries political risk for the administration.
That includes weathering any blame when violence flares as the US steps back from conflict zones in the Middle East, and Afghanistan.
But a relatively hands-off approach in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict also could spare the US years of shuttle diplomacy in support of a peace process that neither side actively supports.
At least 200 Palestinians had been killed in the strikes as of today, including 59 children and 35 women, with 1300 people wounded, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
Eight people in Israel have been killed in rocket attacks launched from Gaza, including a five-year-old boy and a soldier.
Mr Blinken also said he had asked Israel for any evidence for its claim that Hamas was operating in a Gaza office building housing The Associated Press and Al Jazeera news bureaus that was destroyed in an Israeli airstrike over the weekend.
But he said that he personally had "not seen any information provided."
Mr Blinken's comments came after UN Security Council diplomats and Muslim foreign ministers convened emergency weekend meetings to demand a stop to civilian bloodshed, as Israeli warplanes carried out the deadliest single attacks Sunday in the week of fighting.
Mr Biden's ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, told an emergency high-level meeting of the Security Council on Sunday that the US was "working tirelessly through diplomatic channels" to stop the fighting.
READ MORE: 'They absolutely are going to kill us'
She warned that the return to armed conflict would only put a negotiated two-state solution to the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict even further out of reach.
However, the US blocked moves by China, Norway and Tunisia in the Security Council for the statement by the UN's most powerful body, including a call for the cessation of hostilities.
The proposed statement called for an end to "the crisis related to Gaza" and the protection of civilians, especially children.
In Israel, Hady Amr, a deputy assistant dispatched by Mr Blinken to try to de-escalate the crisis, met with officials.
Mr Blinken himself has no announced plans to stop in the Middle East on his current trip.
Representative Adam Schiff, Democratic chairman of the House intelligence committee, urged Mr Biden on Sunday to step up pressure on both sides to end the fighting and revive talks to resolve Israel's conflicts and flashpoints with the Palestinians.
"I think the administration needs to push harder on Israel and the Palestinian Authority to stop the violence, bring about a cease-fire, end these hostilities, and get back to a process of trying to resolve this long-standing conflict," Mr Schiff, a California Democrat, told CBS's Face the Nation.
Senator Todd Young of Indiana, the senior Republican on the Foreign Relations subcommittee for the region, joined Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy, the subcommittee chairman, in asking both sides to ceasefire.
Senator Jon Ossoff of Georgia separately joined 26 other Democratic senators and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent, on Sunday in urging an immediate cease-fire to prevent further civilian deaths and any further escalation of the overall conflict.
More Democratic lawmakers joined the calls today.
Mr Biden focused on civilian deaths from Hamas rockets in a call with Mr Netanyahu on Saturday, and a White House readout of the call made no mention of the US urging Israel to join in a cease-fire that regional countries were pushing.
Ms Thomas-Greenfield said US diplomats were engaging with Israel, Egypt and Qatar, along with the UN.
Mr Netanyahu told Israelis in a televised address Sunday that Israel "wants to levy a heavy price" on Hamas.
That will "take time," Mr Netanyahu said, signalling the war would rage on for now.
Representatives of Muslim nations met Sunday to demand Israel halt attacks that are killing Palestinian civilians in the crowded Gaza strip.
READ MORE: Sydney charity worker tells of conflict's 'heartbreaking' toll on children
At the virtual meeting of the Security Council, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that returning to the Palestinian rocket fire and Israeli airstrikes in the fourth such war between Israel and Hamas, "only perpetuates the cycles of death, destruction and despair, and pushes farther to the horizon any hopes of coexistence and peace".
Eight foreign ministers spoke at the Security Council session, reflecting the seriousness of the conflict, with almost all urging an end to the fighting.
Queensland to introduce voluntary assisted dying bill
The Queensland Government will introduce a voluntary assisted dying bill into state parliament next week, aimed at patients experiencing health conditions that would cause death within 12 months.
Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said she would support the bill and that government MPs would have a conscience vote.
"These are deeply personal issues and, in fact, having seen firsthand the suffering of both my grandmother and my uncle, it is heart-breaking, and no one wants to see that," Ms Palaszczuk said.
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The announcement comes after the Queensland Law Reform Commission recently handed down a report on the legal framework for voluntary assisted dying, including making recommendations on who should have access to the practice.
Those recommendations include:
- Having an eligible condition that is advanced and progressive and expected to cause death within 12 months
- Have the capacity to make a decision around end-of-life choices
- Be acting voluntarily and without coercion
- Be at least 18 years of age
- Be an Australian citizen or permanent resident and have been a resident of Queensland for at least a year
Ms Palaszczuk has asked Queenslanders to "look closely" at the report and have a "respectful debate" when discussing the proposed legislation.