We’ve rounded up all the latest stories from Australia and around the world – so you don’t have to go searching.
1. Funding for homelessness targets women and children.
The Abbott government will today announce a $230 million federal program to support the homeless extending the National Partnership Agreement on Homelessness until at least 2017.
The Australian reports that Social Services Minister Scott Morrison will commit to funding the national partnership agreement with the proviso that the states match the federal contribution and show the money is used effectively.
Mr Morrison will say that the partnership agreement needed a stronger focus on areas with the greatest need – in particular women and children made homeless as a result of domestic violence.
“It’s got to be used for frontline services, not symbolic gestures,” he told The Australian.
He told The Daily Telegraph “The Coalition government recognises that domestic violence is a leading cause of homelessness and that women and children are particularly vulnerable,”
2. Police search for hit and run driver.
Police are searching for driver of a car that hit and killed a 20-year-old woman in Brisbane.
Nine News reports that Ashleigh Humphreys was hit by a dark coloured sedan just before 4am early Sunday morning while walking along the Western Freeway at Toowong.
It is reported that she had been seen arguing with a friend near a service station before walking home alone.
Police are searching for the driver of a car that struck Ms Humphreys.
Top Comments
Limiting cars on the road by there number plates is not unusual. I was in Santiago Chile in the early 90s and it was the daily norm to be restricted by your number plate. It was a very polluted city. Not sure if it has improved.
re #6, if the baby was delivered/removed alive then it was a legal person (as opposed to being an unborn baby, which wouldn't have legal personhood). If the baby then died after being born due to the actions of the kidnapper, that would constitute murder.