Jumat, 16 Agustus 2019

In pictures: Australian Geographic's photo prize winners - BBC News

Stunning images of nature and wildlife across Australia, New Zealand, Antarctica and some Pacific islands are recognised each year in the Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year competition. Here are some of this year's winners.

All photographs subject to copyright as marked.

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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-49365922

2019-08-16 06:53:49Z
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Rabu, 14 Agustus 2019

'Jurassic world' discovered under Australia - Fox News

A so-called "Jurassic world" has been discovered, consisting of approximately 100 ancient volcanoes, buried deep inside central Australia.

The research, published in Gondwana Research, details the findings of ancient volcanoes that were active between 180 million and 160 million years ago under the Cooper-Eromanga Basin. Now one of the country's largest oil and gas regions, it was once home to an area filled with hot ash and lava flying high into the air, surrounded by rivers that eventually evolved into lakes and coal-swamps.

"While the majority of Earth's volcanic activity occurs at the boundaries of tectonic plates, or under the Earth's oceans, this ancient Jurassic world developed deep within the interior of the Australian continent," said the study's co-author, Simon Holford, in a statement.

STUNNING VOLCANIC 'LOST WORLD' DISCOVERED DEEP IN THE OCEAN

"Its discovery raises the prospect that more undiscovered volcanic worlds reside beneath the poorly explored surface of Australia," Holford added.

The ancient volcanoes, which are well preserved, were discovered under hundreds of feet of rock using advanced subsurface imaging techniques, which are similar to CT scans.

In an interview with IFLScience, Holford said that the discovery of the volcanoes was not anticipated due to the heavy presence of oil exploration and production in the area. The team has termed the province the Warnie Volcanic Province (WVP), "after the Warnie East 1 exploration well, drilled in 1985," according to the study's abstract.

LIFE FOUND THRIVING DEEP UNDER OCEAN FLOOR

It's unlikely there will be much paleontological benefit to discovering the ancient volcanoes, as the drilling rigs used to dig through volcanic rock only make small holes, so the chances of hitting a fossil are minuscule.

However, the discovery of WVP does raise "the possibility of other, yet unidentified, volcanic provinces worldwide," the study notes.

In October, scientists discovered another volcanic "lost world" off the coast of Tasmania, while mapping the seafloor 249 miles east of the country.

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2019-08-14 12:29:08Z
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Sydney stabbing LIVE: Michaela Dunn identified as woman found dead in Clarence Street unit - The Sydney Morning Herald

What we know so far

  • Mert Ney, 20, was seen wielding a knife near the corner of Clarence and King streets about 2pm. Bystanders restrained him with chairs and a milk crate
  • Michaela Dunn, 24, was killed in a Clarence Street unit. Linda Bo, 41, was stabbed but is in a stable condition
  • Police say Mr Ney was a "lone actor" with a history of mental health issues  and no apparent links to terrorist organisations
  • Mr Ney was on conditional release after pleading guilty to possessing a prohibited weapon in June
  • In the days before the stabbing, he was listed as missing after a "domestic violence situation"

Offender stopped to take selfie after alleged murder

Mert Ney stopped to take a selfie after walking out of the Clarence Street building where he allegedly murdered Michaela Dunn, according to CCTV footage obtained by Seven News. 

Mert Ney is captured via CCTV in the laneway near Clarence Street.

Mert Ney is captured via CCTV in the laneway near Clarence Street.Credit:Seven News

The video of the laneway near the building shows Ney taking out his phone and pausing for a photo, moments before he went on to stab Linda Bo and jump on the bonnet of a car while wielding a butcher's knife.

'I saw the guy stab someone ... I froze'

A man who was confronted by Mert Ney on Clarence Street yesterday was emotional when he returned to the scene of the stabbing on Wednesday.

"Looking back on it now, this was a guy who had just killed somebody," emotional witness Vee Morgana told Nine News. "Obviously I didn't know that then."

"I saw the guy stab someone... There was a moment just here on Clarence when it was me and him 10 metres apart. I only had my phone with me and there was a moment where I froze."

Police are still investigating the crime scene at 118 Clarence Street where Michaela Dunn was killed.

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Community devastated, Michaela Dunn a 'whole individual who will be missed and mourned'

The sex worker community has been "devastated by the series of random and senseless acts of violence" in Sydney's CBD, said a joint statement from the Scarlet Alliance, Australian Sex Workers Association and Sex Workers Outreach Project of New South Wales.

"A young woman was murdered by a violent man in Sydney’s CBD yesterday," the statement reads.

"All victims involved in this incident were valued members of their families and communities ... Michaela Dunn was a woman, a community member, and a whole individual who will be missed and mourned.

"Sex workers regularly face barriers to accessing justice and reporting crimes against us, because so often the violence is attributed to our work ... They are equally deserving of empathy and  consideration when befallen by tragedy.

"We are mourning the loss of a valued and loved human being. We offer the victim’s family our deepest and most sincere condolences at this time. Our collective hearts are heavy. "

Mert Ney's sister speaks, says 'sorry a million times' and she wants nothing to do with her brother

Yazel Ney agreed to speak to reporters outside her home in Marayong on Wednesday and said sorry to the family of Michaela Dunn, 24, who was killed in yesterday's attack, writes Tim Barlass.

Ms Ney also said it was "obvious that there has been a steep descent into insanity" regarding her brother's behaviour, but she did not want to comment on whether mental health services had let him down.

"I don't want to like say anything about that because then that's like it's like blaming the services, when they could have been doing all they can. Do, you know, I feel like that's unfair," she said.

"[I am] shocked, angry, disgusted. I hate my last name. If someone in your family did this, like, how would you feel? I'm, like, I'm no threat to myself, sorry, I want to be clear about that.

"I wish there was a way that I could make it all better for [my mother], but I can't. I can't make it better for anyone else and I wish I could."

Michaela Dunn remembered as a 'true delight'

A friend of Ms Dunn, Joan Westenberg, wrote on social media that the 24-year-old Notre Dame graduate was a "true delight to know".

"I’ve known this girl since she was just a kid in high school at 14. Mikki was like my baby sister. I cannot describe how sad and how broken I am at this moment. I loved this kid. She was incredible," Ms Westenberg wrote on Twitter.

"Mikki was a true delight to know ... She deserved to be safe while she worked. Her job does not make her a lurid story. She was a person and she is now gone. And she is gone because male violence has taken her from us."

Domestic Violence Line 1800 65 64 63, 1800-RESPECT 1800 737 732

Second stabbing victim, Linda Bo, still stable in hospital

The Australian Associated Press reported it understands the second woman stabbed in Sydney yesterday is Linda Bo, 41.

Ms Bo is believed to be an employee at shipping company Cosco, which has an office nearby Hotel CBD where she was attacked about 2pm.

She is in a stable condition at St Vincent's Hospital after she was stabbed in the shoulder.

NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller said "the fact she's alive is a miracle", considering Mert Ney likely "went on the street to kill more people".

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Murder victim spoke against sexual violence

Michaela Dunn's mother said her daughter was well-travelled, loving, and from a beautiful family in Sydney's suburbs.

Ms Dunn had travelled to the United States and Sri Lanka in the last year, according to her social media accounts. She also rallied against sexual violence in a Facebook post several years ago.

"Sexual violence and harassment is never acceptable. Take two minutes to read and sign this petition, it's such an important issue that needs to be addressed sooner than later," she wrote on a post from 2016. 

Michaela Dunn, 24, identified as victim

The victim of yesterday's attack was Michaela Dunn, 24, from Sydney.

She was a former student at Rosebank College in Sydney's inner west and attended the University of Notre Dame.

Her mother told Nine News she wanted everyone to know her daughter was from an ordinary family in suburban Sydney, and she "was very much loved".

She was described as a "beautiful girl from a beautiful family".

Michaela Dunn's mother described her as a "beautiful girl from a beautiful family".

Michaela Dunn's mother described her as a "beautiful girl from a beautiful family".Credit:Facebook

Sister's emotional words for stabbing victim

The sister of accused stabber Mert Ney has spoken with reporters outside the family's Marayong home, telling them she is sorry that a young woman has lost her life.

"She was like, younger than me. She could have been going out like within a few hours, to do shopping with her mum, eat dinner with her boyfriend, go speak to her girlfriends ... and now she can't do that can she?

"All the words that I can say isn't ever gonna bring her back, is it? I want to say, I'm really, really sorry. No one should have... she was like, defenceless."

Homeless teens say 'agitated' Ney stayed with them in safe house before attack

Nine News has spoken to two young people who said they stayed in a safe house with Mert Ney the night before the attack, sleeping in an adjacent room. They described him as agitated and said he told them he had been kicked out of home and had recently been in hospital. 

He also rambled about a USB and left very early in the morning on Tuesday, they said. You can watch their account in the video below:

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2019-08-14 07:01:00Z
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Selasa, 13 Agustus 2019

Australia stabbing: Members of public use milk crate to stop suspect in fatal attack - NBCNews.com

SYDNEY — A knife-wielding man with a history of mental illness who is suspected of killing one woman and stabbing another in Sydney, Australia was stopped when members of the public were able to pin him on his back using a milk crate, authorities said.

The man is believed to be responsible for the slaying a woman in a downtown Sydney apartment before wounding another woman nearby and attempting to stab other people Tuesday. Police and witnesses say they heard the suspect yelling "Allahu akbar," or "God is great."

Police have not labeled the rampage an act of terrorism, although the 21-year-old assailant — who was restrained by members of the public before being arrested — had collected information on his computer about mass killings in North America and New Zealand, New South Wales state Police Commissioner Michael Fuller said.

"It is not currently classed as a terrorist incident. Obviously, as the investigation continues we will reassess that," Fuller told reporters.

Police gather at the crime scene after a man stabbed a woman and attempted to stab others in central Sydney on Tuesday, before being pinned down by members of the public and detained by police.Saeed Khan / AFP - Getty Images

"He is by definition, at the moment, a lone actor. Information was found on him that would suggest he has some ideologies in relation to terrorism, but he has no links to terrorism," Fuller said. "There was certainly information found on him about other crimes of mass casualties and mass deaths around the world."

A gunman who recently killed 22 people at a Texas Walmart appears to have praised the March 15 shootings in Christchurch, New Zealand, where an Australian white supremacist is charged with killing 51 worshipers at two mosques.

Witnesses said the assailant Tuesday was carrying a 12-inch knife and attempted to stab multiple people near a busy intersection in Australia's largest city at around 2 p.m. Fuller described the weapon as a butcher's knife.

Police said a man was arrested, and that a 41-year-old woman with a stab wound to her back was taken to a hospital in stable condition.

Police said the body of a 21-year-old woman was later discovered in a nearby fourth-floor apartment.

"A number of members of the public physically restrained the offender," Police Superintendent Gavin Wood said. "I want to acknowledge those members of the public who got involved. They were significantly brave people."

Video showed that people pinned the man to the pavement on his back with a plastic milk crate over his head and two chairs over his body.

Wood said it appeared that the attack was unprovoked. The man "attempted to stab multiple people. Those attempts, thankfully, were unsuccessful," Wood said.

Uber driver Leon Baghani said the assailant, clutching a knife, jumped on the hood and then the roof of his Mercedes as he was driving an elderly couple on the street where the violence occurred.

"For a second, I thought maybe he's wearing a vest of some sort and he's going to detonate himself," Baghani told Ten Network television. "So I quickly accelerated and made a left turn and made sure that he came off the roof of the car."

A witness told reporters that the man was screaming comments about religion, before yelling to police that he wanted to be shot. Police said he used the Arabic phrase "Allahu akbar."

A witness, Paul O'Shaughnessy, said he and his brother Luke were working in the office of their recruitment company when they heard shouting through an open window. They looked out and saw a Caucasian man screaming "extremist" words, O'Shaughnessy said.

The brothers, fearing the man was conducting a terrorist attack, ran down to the street and began chasing the man, who was covered in blood.

Luke O'Shaughnessy and another man caught up with the offender and tackled him to the ground, Paul O'Shaughnessy said. Along with other passers-by, they used a milk crate and a chair to keep him pinned to the ground, he said.

Paul O'Shaughnessy told The Associated Press that the man "didn't show any remorse at all."

Fuller said the assailant had a "history of mental health." He said the assailant would be charged.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Twitter that the violence was "deeply concerning" and praised the people who restrained the assailant.

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https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/australia-stabbing-members-public-use-milk-crate-stop-suspect-fatal-n1041726

2019-08-13 11:40:00Z
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Sydney stabbing attack in Australia by suspect with history of mental health issues today - Live updates - CBS News

Sydney -- Australian police said a knife-wielding man yelling "Allahu akbar," or "God is great," attempted to stab several people in downtown Sydney on Tuesday before being arrested. At least one woman was brought to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries after the attack, and another was found dead in a nearby residence.

Police said later that "all the evidence points to" a man with mental health issues lashing out, but they would not rule out any potential motives as the investigation was still at an early stage. Given the information they had, they said the incident was not being classed as terrorism and that the suspect was believed to have acted alone.

Witnesses said the man, wielding a long knife, tried to stab multiple people near a busy intersection. New South Wales state police said in a statement that the man was caught and the woman was in stable condition.

Trending News

Not far away, the body of a woman, an acquaintance of the detained suspect and of a similar age to the 21-year-old suspect, was found in a home.

A witness told reporters the man screamed comments about religion before yelling to police that he wanted to be shot. Police said he used the Arabic phrase "Allahu akbar." However, police later said the man also had in his possession a thumbnail USB drive containing information related to recent mass shooting attacks carried out by white supremacists. 

Asked by a reporter whether the conflicting religious references suggested to him a mental health problem at the root of the crime, New South Wales Police Commissioner Michael Fuller said, "certainly all the evidence points to that" at this stage. 

The incident brought the central business district of Australia's biggest city to an early afternoon standstill.

Videos posted on social media showed several members of the public, including tourists from England, chasing the armed man through the streets and eventually pinning him to the ground with chairs and a milk crate. They held him in place until police officers arrived and took him into custody. 

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison praised members of the public who helped subdue the suspect during the attack.

Reuters quotes Police Superintendent Gavin Wood as telling reporters in Sydney the woman was stabbed in the back but her wounds weren't life-threatening and that the attack on her seemed to be unprovoked.

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https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sydney-australia-stabbing-spree-man-yelling-god-is-great-arabic-today-2019-08-13/

2019-08-13 11:23:00Z
CAIiELaLbdodhBbjCJDXmusX0tkqGQgEKhAIACoHCAowyNj6CjDyiPICMKb_xAU

Sydney, Australia: Sydney stabbing spree by man yelling "God is great" in Arabic - CBS News

Sydney -- Australian police and witnesses said a knife-wielding man yelling "Allahu akbar," or "God is great," attempted to stab several people in downtown Sydney on Tuesday before being arrested. At least one woman was brought to a hospital.

Police said later that "all the evidence points to" a man with mental health issues lashing out, but they would not rule out any potential motives as the investigation was still at an early stage. Given the information they had, however, they said the incident was not being classed as terrorism and that the suspect was believed to have acted alone.

Witnesses say the man, wielding a long knife, tried to stab multiple people near a busy intersection. New South Wales state police said in a statement that the man was caught and the woman was in stable condition.

Trending News

Not far away, the body of a woman believed to have been an acquaintance of the detained suspect was found in a home.

A witness told reporters the man was screaming comments about religion before yelling to police that he wanted to be shot. Police said he used the Arabic phrase "Allahu akbar." However, police later said the man also had in his possession a thumbnail USB drive containing information related to white supremacy. 

Asked by a reporter whether the conflicting religious references suggested to him a mental health problem at the root of the crime, New South Wales Police Commissioner Michael Fuller said, "certainly all the evidence points to that" at this stage of the investigation.

The incident brought the central business district of Australia's biggest city to an early afternoon standstill, the Reuters news service reports.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison praised members of the public who helped subdue the suspect during the attack.

Reuters quotes Police Superintendent Gavin Wood as telling reporters in Sydney the woman was stabbed in the back but her wounds weren't life-threatening and that the attack on her seemed to be unprovoked.

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https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sydney-australia-stabbing-spree-man-yelling-god-is-great-arabic-today-2019-08-13/

2019-08-13 08:27:00Z
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Jumat, 09 Agustus 2019

China’s influence on campus chills free speech in Australia, New Zealand - The Washington Post

SYDNEY — Chinese students poured into Australia and New Zealand in their hundreds of thousands over the past 20 years, paying sticker prices for university degrees that made higher education among both countries’ top export earners.

Now, as a more-authoritarian China projects its influence deeper into the South Pacific, attempts by Chinese students and diplomats to interfere with anti-Beijing dissidents and stifle free speech on campus pose an uncomfortable challenge for both U.S. allies.

The immediate trigger for the flare-ups was mass protests in Hong Kong, which authorities in the semiautonomous Chinese territory are struggling to contain. Protesters there have assailed what they say is the steady erosion in Hong Kong’s rule of law, aided and abetted by the city’s pro-Beijing leaders.

Students, academics and officials in Australia and New Zealand, two of the modern world’s older democracies, now find their natural sympathy for the Hong Kong protesters colliding with their nations’ economic dependency on Beijing — a weakness the Chinese Communist Party isn’t hesitating to exploit.

The most visible flash point is on campus. Students who support and oppose the Chinese Community Party have spent recent days erecting, ripping down, and restoring walls covered with cards and Post-it notes calling for freedom in Hong Kong at universities in the Australian cities of Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Hobart, and in New Zealand.

“Beijing’s influence on campuses is responsible for widespread self-censorship by universities and academics in Australia and New Zealand,” said Clive Hamilton, a professor of public ethics at Charles Sturt University in Canberra and author of “Silent Invasion: China’s Influence in Australia.”

“The events of the last couple of weeks on Australian campuses have proved to be a serious escalation of Beijing’s interference,” he said.

Every pro-democracy protest is countered by Beijing’s well-drilled student supporters. When some University of Sydney students proposed a protest on Friday, which did not proceed, opponents shared notes on the Chinese WeChat platform about how to respond.

“The pro-Hong Kong independence demonstration on August 9 is planned by some forces of Sydney University,” one person wrote, according to an image taken by a student. “We will not use force, but will absolutely not sit idly by and do nothing. [We] will fight the separatist forces to the end using legal means. Never make a concession!!”

The person, who could not be reached for comment, added in the message that they had “reported this to the education section” of the Chinese Consulate.

[Hong Kong strike cripples city as leader warns of ‘dangerous situation’]

After years of feeling fortunate about their economic relationship with China, Australians are starting to worry about the cost. On Thursday, a ruling-party lawmaker, Andrew Hastie, compared China’s expansion to the rise of Germany before World War II and suggested it posed a direct military threat.

“Like the French, Australia has failed to see how mobile our authoritarian neighbor has become,” Hastie wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald.

Hastie’s comments ricocheted between Beijing and Canberra, where the Chinese Embassy condemned the former officer in Australia’s Special Air Service Regiment, an elite army special forces unit.

“We urge certain Australian politicians to take off their ‘colored lens’ and view China’s development path in an objective and rational way,” a spokesman said. “They should make efforts to promote mutual trust between China and Australia, instead of doing the opposite.”

As the smallest members of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance that includes the United States, Britain and Canada, Australia and New Zealand are attractive targets for Chinese influence and espionage operations, analysts say.

Paul Buchanan, a strategic analyst based in Auckland, said that New Zealand is an “ideal liberal democratic lab rat” for China to experiment with ways to use “the very freedoms and transparency of democratic systems against them.”

[Will China crush the Hong Kong protests? For Beijing, there are no good options]

Chinese diplomats in both Australia and New Zealand appear to be encouraging confrontations by praising counterprotesters.

On July 29, a student at New Zealand’s Auckland University was confronted by a group of men who objected to her involvement in adorning a protest site, known as a “Lennon Wall,” with messages of support for Hong Kong demonstrators.

Cellphone footage uploaded to social media showed one of the men moving aggressively toward the student, who fell to the ground.

Three days later, the Chinese Consulate in Auckland published a statement that appeared to support the actions of the alleged assailant and his companions, conveying its “appreciation to the students for their spontaneous patriotism,” while condemning unnamed individuals for “inciting anti-China sentiment.”

Protests and counterprotests have taken place since; participants say they have received threatening messages from unknown senders.

Defenders of free speech say the episodes are a wake-up call. New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said this week that officials have reminded their Chinese counterparts that New Zealand “will uphold and maintain our freedom of expression.”

[Paramount and paranoid: China’s Xi faces crisis of confidence]

Standing up for such values comes at the cost of worsening relations with Beijing, the top trade partner of both countries and a lucrative source of funds for universities, which lack the big endowments of American colleges. China’s purchases of iron ore, coal and dairy products have helped power Australia and New Zealand’s prosperity.

The University of Queensland, where punches were thrown at a Hong Kong sympathy protest two weeks ago, is so close to Chinese authorities that it appointed the Chinese consul general in Brisbane a visiting professor of language and culture last month.

The consulate then praised the “patriotic behavior” of 300 pro-Beijing students after the violent incident, prompting Australia’s defense minister to warn foreign diplomats against interfering in free speech.

The university has said that it is committed to freedom of expression on campus.

https://twitter.com/nilssonjones_/status/1153869342502637568?s=20">

Among themselves, mainland Chinese students share advice on how attract sympathetic coverage in confrontations with the left-wing activists they call the “baizuo,” a pejorative term for Western liberals that translates as “white left.”

“UQ students please be calm, don’t resort to violence,” said a recent post on Weibo, China’s Twitter-like service. “Try to learn from the tricks of those pro-Hong Kong independence activists. If you push me I will fall over. Fake tumble, cry and wail, call campus police. We are too strong, which won’t work in the world of baizuo.”

“It’s very tense,” said Drew Pavlou, one of the student organizers of the University of Queensland protest, in an interview. “It doesn’t feel safe. I have had to have security walk me to some classes.”

In New Zealand, an event commemorating China’s 1989 suppression of pro-democracy protests at Tiananmen Square scheduled for June 3 was moved away from Auckland University of Technology following pressure from Chinese officials.

[Threat from China recalls that of Nazi Germany, Australian lawmaker says]

Emails obtained through freedom-of-information requests by online outlet Newsroom revealed that China’s vice consul met with the university’s president on May 31 to request that the event be scuttled. The university received emails from the consulate on the matter, too.

University spokeswoman Alison Sykora denied that the commemoration, which was held in a different location off campus, was abandoned because of diplomatic pressure.

In Australia, officials are so concerned about Chinese influence that the attorney general has asked his department to examine why 14 Confucius Institutes — Chinese-funded education units within Australian universities — have not been registered as agents of foreign influence under a new law directed at Chinese espionage, influence and propaganda.

At the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand, a Confucius Institute shares a building with the office of Anne-Marie Brady, a professor who has researched Chinese government influence. Brady has complained of threats, break-ins at her home and attempted sabotage of her car. Police investigated but were unable to identify a culprit.

Reflecting a growing unease that Australia’s economic future depends on an unpredictable adversary, former prime minister John Howard said this week that unrest in Hong Kong “perhaps represents a glimpse of the future for Chinese society.”

“If you’ve been born into relative affluence and comfort you take that for granted and you resent being told how to run your life,” he said. “Perhaps over the next 50 years we’re going to see just how all of that works out.”

Stoakes reported from Christchurch, New Zealand. Yang Liu in Beijing contributed to this report.

Read more

Paramount and paranoid: China’s Xi faces crisis of confidence

Hong Kong strike cripples city as leader warns of ‘dangerous situation’

Threat from China recalls that of Nazi Germany, Australian lawmaker says

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2019-08-09 09:54:22Z
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