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Cherry pickers brought in to remove protesters arrested after six-hour ordeal

Almost a dozen protesters have been charged after disruptive action at two weapons manufacturing businesses in Canberra. Subscribe now for unlimited access. or signup to continue reading All articles from our website & app The digital version of Today’s Paper Crosswords, Sudoku and Trivia I report on crime, emergency services, police and jail matters. Email me on bageshri.s@canberratimes.com.au or send confidential tips to bageshri.s@proton.me I report on crime, emergency services, police and jail matters. Email me on bageshri.s@canberratimes.com.au or send confidential tips to bageshri.s@proton.me More from Court and Crime Daily Your morning news Today’s top stories curated by our news team. Also includes evening update. Read More

Cherry pickers brought in to remove protesters arrested after six-hour ordeal Read More »

Man accused of breaching bowlo assault sentence with nightclub, strip club attacks

A man has been accused of serious assaults at a Canberra strip club and nightclub, the latter said to have been in retaliation to an accidental bump. Subscribe now for unlimited access. or signup to continue reading All articles from our website & app The digital version of Today’s Paper Crosswords, Sudoku and Trivia Tim covers courts and legal affairs for the Canberra Times. He came to the nation’s capital via the Daily Advertiser in Wagga. Contact: tim.piccione@canberratimes.com.au. Tim covers courts and legal affairs for the Canberra Times. He came to the nation’s capital via the Daily Advertiser in Wagga. Contact: tim.piccione@canberratimes.com.au. More from Court and Crime Daily Your morning news Today’s top stories curated by our news team. Also includes evening update. Read More

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One dead, one hospitalised after car went down embankment on South Coast

A man is dead after a car went down an embankment and struck a tree on the state’s Far South Coast. Subscribe now for unlimited access. or signup to continue reading All articles from our website & app The digital version of Today’s Paper Crosswords, Sudoku and Trivia I am a regional daily news journalist on the Far South Coast of NSW aiming to immortalise the stories of everyday people through narratives. Have you got a story? Contact me on 0437 166 441 or at james.parker@austcommunitymedia.com.au I am a regional daily news journalist on the Far South Coast of NSW aiming to immortalise the stories of everyday people through narratives. Have you got a story? Contact me on 0437 166 441 or at james.parker@austcommunitymedia.com.au Daily Your morning news Today’s top stories curated by our news team. Also includes evening update. Read More

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The big stink: This is how much raw sewage is being dumped into the Brisbane River

The big stink: This is how much raw sewage is being dumped into the Brisbane River Complications with a “once in a generation” under river infrastructure project is forcing officials to dump millions of litres of raw sewage and stormwater directly into the Brisbane River. Nine News can exclusively reveal 540 megalitres have been discharged in the past 18 months and the practice is set to continue for months, if not years. The problem stems from the $210 million Bulimba-Hamilton Siphon Renewal Program. The project involves restoring a tunnel between 1948 and 1954, used to transport sewage from a catchment of about 150,000 residents on Brisbane’s southside to the Luggage Point Resource Recovery Centre on the north, for processing. The project hit a complication in January 2024 where a pipe within the tunnel burst. Urban Utilities chief executive Paul Arnold.Credit: Nine News Now, during times of heavy rain, sewage and stormwater must be discharged into the river, to prevent the entire system overloading. Nine News exclusively obtained the data from the Department of Environment, which issues permits for the releases. Urban Utilities chief executive Paul Arnold said the sewage is filtered through a “grid” and is usually “heavily diluted” by stormwater. “During sustained rainfall, our network can’t manage our stormwater that finds its way into our network, creating the need for us to discharge into the Brisbane River. “That has been ongoing since the commencement of the project and will continue until we’ve completed the replacement of both pipes within the siphon.” “We signalled and communicated to community groups, to the Department of Environment, that there will be times, with the reduced capacity of the siphon, that there will be discharges.” Arnold said the discharges occur from a point in Morningside and all have complied with regulations. “Every time there’s a discharge, we take that very seriously,” he said. “We want to make sure the community is protected so we issue emails and communicate to river users in the area that there has been a discharge. “We ask them not to make contact with that area of the Brisbane River between Vic Lucas Park at Bulimba, all the way up to Colmslie Beach Reserve.” Brisbane City Council is required to publish the results of its Water Quality Monitoring program. A reading detecting 500 colony forming units per 100 millilitre of water suggests “there may be a significant risk of high levels of illness transmission” in the water. In the weeks after Cyclone Alfred, readings detected more than three times that amount in Colmslie, West End and Indooroopilly. Resident Adam Bowden began a community group to advocate for cleaner waterways, after bacteria levels spiked in Cabbage Tree Creek, near the Sandgate Sewage Treatment Plant. He said the revelations of the discharges into the Brisbane River were “absolutely disgusting”. Adam Bowden started a community group after local waterways were found to be contaminated.Credit: Nine News “Honestly, we cannot continue to let this happen, I am mind-blown by this data,” he said. “I knew the situation was bad but this is worse than I expected. “We want people to come to Brisbane and see a beautiful clean city, if we continue on the path we’re going, we’re not going to see that.” Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter. Most Viewed in National Loading Read More

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Indonesia ferry fire kills three, more than 500 rescued

AFP 21 Jul, 2025 07:42 AM2 mins to read Indonesian authorities say three people died and more than 500 others were rescued after a ferry fire off the island of Sulawesi. Photo / Supplied Indonesian authorities say three people died and more than 500 others were rescued after a ferry fire off the island of Sulawesi. Photo / Supplied Three people died and more than 500 others were rescued after a ferry caught fire off the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, emergency officials say. Passengers jumped overboard with lifejackets after the fire broke out at the stern of the KM Barcelona 5 as it sailed to Manado, according to the Read More

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Pacific Islands push hard as International Court of Justice set to deliver landmark climate ruling

Home / World AFP 21 Jul, 2025 04:03 AM4 mins to read The Peace Palace is the seat of the International Court of Justice at The Hague. Photo / Getty Images The Peace Palace is the seat of the International Court of Justice at The Hague. Photo / Getty Images The top United Nations court will on Wednesday hand down a landmark global legal blueprint for tackling climate change that also sets out top polluters’ responsibilities towards the countries suffering most. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has been tasked with crafting a so-called advisory opinion on countries’ obligations to Advertisement Advertise with NZME. Read More

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