We’ve rounded up the latest news from Australia and around the world.
1. Family murdered in axe attack.
Three members of a Perth family have been murdered in an apparent axe attack in South Africa where they had just moved.
The family had been living in Perth for six years and had returned to South Africa last year.
Martin van Breda, 54, his wife Teresa, 55, and son Rudi, 22, were found dead at their home in Stellenbosch, about 50km east of Cape Town.
Their daughter Marli, aged 16, is in a critical condition, while another son, Henri, 20, was slightly injured.
The Times reports that the son, Henri has been taken by police custody for questioning.
Eben Potgieter, chairman of the estate’s home owners’ association said “[Henri] could not have been seriously injured because he could walk. I saw this myself. Henri is being treated as a witness at this stage. He had scratches and cuts.”
Martin van Breda worked for Engel & Völkers in Australia, an international company that sells and rents “premium residential property, commercial real estate and yachts”.
2. Martin Place siege inquest begins
A coronial inquest into the Martin Place Lindt Café siege begins today in Sydney.
No witnesses will be called on the first day instead Jeremy Gormly, the counsel assisting the coroner, will outline a provisional list of issues the investigation and inquest will look at.
The inquest announced shortly after the siege aims to determine how the deaths of cafe manager Tori Johnson, 34, and barrister and mother-of-three Katrina Dawson, 38, occurred, the factors that contributed to them and whether they could have been prevented.
Top Comments
Does Michelle Obama expect Saudis to take off their headscarves when she meets them in America in a show of 'respect' for that fact that she is of a different religion? No, because she respects their religion and culture. Why is her religion not respected when she goes to Saudi, I wonder...
No 12 is interesting but looking at gut bacteria and how it has changed and how it can effect allergies hasn't really got a lot to do with the Paleo way of eating...on the whole Paleo does not encourage the consumption of diary and if you do consume diary it is encouraged in it's most natural and fermented form. From the above article it looks like they were giving them a pro biotic in a highly concentrated state as an aid to slowly increase the tolerance levels. I don't doubt that a gut bacteria level and health have an impact on any number of things but I can't fathom the above research being credited to a 'Paleo way of life" which is just a diet fad. You do have to love science but you also have to ensure you are not crediting bogus phylosophies that overlap with actual science...