https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/21/media/australian-newspapers-media-blackout-australia/index.html
2019-10-21 07:41:00Z
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Police in Australia have charged an Iraqi man over a people-smuggling operation which caused the deaths of more than 350 people.
The group of asylum seekers drowned in 2001 after their boat sank during a journey from Indonesia to Australia.
Police say the 43-year-old was part of a syndicate which arranged their travel and accommodation for money.
He is the third person to be charged over the incident, which took place off the coast of Indonesia.
Police said he was taken into custody at Brisbane airport after his extradition from New Zealand, and faces 10 years in prison if found guilty. He will appear at a Brisbane court on 31 October.
Authorities did not name the man, but the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper has identified him as Maythem Radhi.
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Mr Radhi has denied responsibility for the deaths, and has been fighting extradition attempts for a decade.
He was granted refugee status in 2009 and had been living in Auckland with his wife and children.
"Let's not lose sight of the fact that more than 350 people died in this tragedy," Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw said in a statement. "They are owed justice and we remain committed to deterring those who profit from this trade."
Australian police have continued to investigate the incident, which took place while the boat was heading to remote Christmas Island.
Iraqi national Khaleed Daoed was extradited to Australia from Sweden in 2003 and given a nine-year prison sentence for the operation.
Another key organiser, Egyptian trafficker Abu Quassey, was convicted in his home country in 2003 and given a seven-year sentence.
Thousands of asylum seekers try to reach Australia by sea every year, many paying huge sums of money to people-smugglers to transport them.
Indonesia is often used as a transit point as international borders in the region are hard to control.
The journey is fraught with danger and Australian authorities frequently conduct rescue operations to assist those trapped at sea.
But immigration continues to be a divisive issue in Australian politics. Australia has also been criticised for its policy of mandatory detention for those arriving without a valid visa.
Police in Australia have charged an Iraqi man over a people-smuggling operation which caused the deaths of more than 350 people.
The group of asylum seekers drowned in 2001 after their boat sank during a journey from Indonesia to Australia.
Police say the 43-year-old was part of a syndicate which arranged their travel and accommodation for money.
He is the third person to be charged over the incident, which took place off the coast of Indonesia.
Police said he was taken into custody at Brisbane airport after his extradition from New Zealand, and faces 10 years in prison if found guilty. He will appear at a Brisbane court on 31 October.
Authorities did not name the man, but the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper has identified him as Maythem Radhi.
Media playback is unsupported on your device
Mr Radhi has denied responsibility for the deaths, and has been fighting extradition attempts for a decade.
He was granted refugee status in 2009 and had been living in Auckland with his wife and children.
"Let's not lose sight of the fact that more than 350 people died in this tragedy," Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw said in a statement. "They are owed justice and we remain committed to deterring those who profit from this trade."
Australian police have continued to investigate the incident, which took place while the boat was heading to remote Christmas Island.
Iraqi national Khaleed Daoed was extradited to Australia from Sweden in 2003 and given a nine-year prison sentence for the operation.
Another key organiser, Egyptian trafficker Abu Quassey, was convicted in his home country in 2003 and given a seven-year sentence.
Thousands of asylum seekers try to reach Australia by sea every year, many paying huge sums of money to people-smugglers to transport them.
Indonesia is often used as a transit point as international borders in the region are hard to control.
The journey is fraught with danger and Australian authorities frequently conduct rescue operations to assist those trapped at sea.
But immigration continues to be a divisive issue in Australian politics. Australia has also been criticised for its policy of mandatory detention for those arriving without a valid visa.
A former Anglican Dean of Newcastle in Australia has been jailed for raping a 15-year-old boy in 1991.
Graeme Lawrence, now 77, is reported to be the second most senior Australian religious figure to be convicted of child sexual abuse, after Catholic Cardinal George Pell.
Lawrence was Anglican dean in the New South Wales city when he lured the boy to his home and raped him.
A court rejected Lawrence's assertion that he had never met his victim.
Judge Tim Gartelmann sentenced Lawrence to spend a maximum of eight years in jail, saying he had exploited his position of power to abuse the boy.
"The victim and his mother must have trusted him because he was the dean," Judge Gartelmann told the Newcastle District Court, the Australian Associated Press reported.
The court heard Lawrence had invited the boy to his home following a youth concert at Newcastle's Christchurch Cathedral.
He had forced the boy - who "was so scared he was shaking" - to the floor before raping him, the judge said on Thursday.
Lawrence served as dean for 24 years until 2008, but was defrocked by the Anglican church in 2012 after the abuse allegations came to light.
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He will be eligible for parole after four-and-a-half years.
Pell, one of the Catholic Church's most senior figures, was jailed for six years in March after being convicted of sexually abusing two boys in the 1990s.
The former Vatican treasurer is waiting to learn whether his final bid to overturn his convictions will be heard by a court.
"The passenger, a 45 year old woman from Vietnam, had her visitor visa canceled for failing to declare an extensive cache of food concealed in her luggage, including over 4.5 kilos of pork," Minister for Agriculture Bridget McKenzie said in a statement. "In the midst of what is potentially the biggest animal disease event the world has seen, it beggars belief that someone would deliberately attempt to bring pork meat past our border."
The woman was traveling with 4.5 kilograms (10 pounds) of pork, a particular concern for Australian officials amid a worldwide swine fever epidemic.
Australia Border Force
The woman was flagged by border officials at Sydney airport and pulled aside for a check after she didn't declare any banned items to customs. She is the first tourist to have her visa canceled and be expelled from the country over a breach of biosecurity laws. She will be allowed to return in three years.
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"Since we increased border checks we've been seizing 100 kilograms per week in illegal pork products. Between 5 November 2018 and 31 August 2019 over 27 tonnes of pork were intercepted on air travelers entering Australia."
There's a slithering bandit on the loose down under.
Officials in Australia are searching a suburb of Sydney where an adult boa constrictor is believed to be "at large" after "freshly shed" snake skin was discovered last week.
Professional snake wrangler Australian Snake Catchers said on Facebook the boa constrictor, about 8.2 feet long is believed to be loose in the Cascades area of Silverdale.
"We have been out to the property and conducted an extensive search of the surrounding area," the group said. "DO NOT ATTEMPT TO CAPTURE THIS SNAKE."
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The New South Wales Government warned residents in a letter the adult boa constrictor was "at large" in or around the Cascades Estate area.
In the letter, the government said it was "in the process of trying to locate and capture the animal and is requesting that residents be on the lookout for it and to report any sightings."
Officials in Australia are searching a suburb of Sydney where an adult boa constrictor is believed to be "at large" after "freshly shed" snakeskin was discovered. (Australian Snake Catchers/Facebook)
Officials sent out the warning after a "freshly shed snake skin" was found at a construction site on Oct 9.
Boa constrictors, native to Central and South America, are considered to be one of the world's largest snake species with an average length of up to nine feet. The reptiles are illegal in Australia, only allowed in zoos for conservation reasons, and are known for being an invasive species.
"The Boa constrictor can represent a threat to humans, particularly small children, as well as domestic pets. It may impact on agricultural activities and it is known to threaten species of amphibians, birds, lizards, snakes and bats," according to the NSW government.
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Sean Cade from Australian Snake Catchers told the BBC he believes the snake was kept as an illegal bpet, and "more than likely been bred in Australia."
Cade also warned the snake can eat prey "four times the size of its stomach."
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"This thing would take a full-sized kangaroo mate, no problem," Cade told the BBC. "The fear is that a young kid will be playing in the back yard, and this snake will mosey on up."
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Australia Bans Vietnam Traveler as Pig Germ Looms in Luggage BloombergView full coverage on Google News