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Biggest shock of NRL season

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 16 April 2015 | 04.30

NRL 360: Paul Kent shares his opinion on recent reports Daly Cherry-Evans is considering a backflip on his move to the Gold Coast Titans

Daly Cherry-Evans is set to backflip on his deal to join the Titans. pic Mark Evans Source: News Corp Australia

STAR half-back Daly Cherry-Evans has started preliminary investigations into reneging on a $5 million deal with Gold Coast to stay with Manly.

The Daily Telegraph understands the Sea Eagles know of Cherry-Evans' private desire to remain at Brookvale and have held internal discussions about the matter.

One source close to the drama: "Daly never wanted to leave Manly in the first place."

Cherry-Evans manager Gavin Orr has denied his client wants to backflip on the Titans contract.

The Gold Coast deal cannot be registered with the NRL until after round 13.

Daly Cherry-Evans looks set to backflip on his deal with the Titans. Source: Getty Images

Gold Coast would be absolutely filthy if Cherry-Evans walked away from the deal, given five-eighth Aidan Sezer will leave after signing with Canberra.

The Raiders will be watching developments closely, given Sezer could also decide to stay at the Titans.

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When contacted by The Daily Telegraph on Thursday, Manly chairman Scott Penn only said: "No comment."

There is little doubt Cherry-Evans is thinking about backflipping but there is still no guarantee it will happen.

He signed with Gold Coast to be near his close mate, fellow Queenslander State of Origin star Nate Myles. Ironically, Myles has also been linked to a switch to Manly.

Cherry-Evans' wife, Vessa, was born and bred on Sydney's northern beaches. They have just built a new home in the area.

The Sea Eagles have plenty of cash to throw at Cherry-Evans. They were rocked last month when Cherry-Evans signed with Gold Coast and five-eighth Kieran Foran announced he was joining Parramatta from next season.

Foran has no intention on reneging on his deal with the Eels.

Gold Coast were said to be "floored" by the Cherry-Evans speculation on Thursday.

Orr is believed to have told Titans officials Cherry-Evans will be honouring his four-year deal.

Titans CEO Graham Annesley has refuted an speculation the playmaker will not honour the deal he made with the club.

"Following media speculation over the last few hours I have spoken directly with Gavin Orr and Chris Orr of Pacific Sports Management," Annesley said.

"I have been assured that any suggestion Daly Cherry Evans will not be honouring his contract with the Titans is untrue".

Gold Coast officials though are still deeply concerned at the possibility Cherry-Evans may remain at Manly.

DCE leaves Cronulla Leagues Club with his wife Vessa Rockliff after talks with the Sharks. Pic Brett Costello Source: News Corp Australia

Cherry-Evans' signing at Robina was one of the biggest in the club's history. A decision to renege would have massive ramifications on the Titans.

Conversely, Manly and their fans would be delighted to retain the Queensland and Australian star.

Cherry-Evans' form has been modest this season and he is close to being overlooked for the Australian Test side.

There are also reports the Sydney Roosters are working on Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, who signed with the New Zealand Warriors last week.

The Roosters want Tuivasa-Sheck to renege before round 13 and remain at Bondi.

Originally published as Biggest shock of NRL season
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Punch that nearly killed a brother

A Sydney court has been played CCTV footage of the moment one Irishman allegedly turned on his brother in a late-night attack. Courtesy: Nine News

AN Irish tourist who left his brother fighting for his life after hitting him outside a Sydney pub should be sent to jail, a court has heard.

Barry Lyttle, 33, pleaded guilty on Thursday morning to recklessly causing grievous bodily harm to his younger brother Patrick, and returned to court in the afternoon for a sentence hearing.

Patrick and Barry Lyttle leave the Downing Centre today. Picture: Justin Sanson Source: News Corp Australia

Patrick, who was hit outside a Potts Point pub early on January 3, has called for the charges against his brother to be dropped but prosecutor Alex Poulos said a full-time custodial sentence should be imposed.

Magistrate Graeme Curran agreed custody was likely but is considering alternatives to incarceration.

"The issue is whether or not I suspend a prison term," he said. Barry has been supported by his father and brother, who spoke of the adverse impact the assault and subsequent treatment and court appearances had on the family.

The brothers appear to argue before Patrick is struck. Picture: Nine News Source: Channel 9

The older Lyttle brother can be seen punching his younger brother. Picture: Nine News Source: Channel 9

Patrick is knocked to the ground. Picture: Nine News Source: Channel 9

"It has been an awful ordeal for me but everyone can see it has been for Barry too," Patrick told the court in a victim impact statement.

His father's health had also suffered during the three months he has been in Australia, he said.

"He doesn't want to go home without his two sons." The brothers, he added, planned to speak to youth back in Ireland about the dangers of one punch assaults.

"Youth work could be my future," Patrick, who has volunteered in the role, said.

Patrick Lyttle arrives at court with his father Oliver, right, with older brother Barry back right. Picture: Justin Sanson Source: News Corp Australia

Prosecutors have asked for a custodial sentence for Lyttle. Picture: Justin Sanson Source: News Corp Australia

Barry's lawyer Chris Watson said his client was remorseful, unlikely to reoffend and of good character.

CCTV footage on the incident played in court shows the brothers drinking together at the pub.

When they leave and walk down a main road Patrick can be seen pushing Barry, who stumbles back before striking.

He then immediately goes to Patrick's side.

"Clearly this was the result of increasing hostility between the two men," Mr Watson said.

Any animosity between the two has since gone and they walked from court together on Thursday, as they have done at earlier appearances.

Barry will return to court for sentencing on April 24.

Originally published as Punch that nearly killed a brother
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Hope for Alzheimer’s breakthrough

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 15 April 2015 | 04.30

Medical breakthrough ... a potential cause and cure for Alzheimer's disease has been identified. Picture News Corp Source: News Limited

A POTENTIAL cause and cure for Alzheimer's disease has been uncovered by US scientists who have linked it to an immune system malfunction.

Immune cells that normally protect the brain instead begin to consume a vital nutrient called arginine in Alzheimer's patients, researchers from Duke University in North Carolina have discovered.

When they blocked this process with a drug, they were able to prevent the formation of 'plaques' in the brain that occur in Alzheimer's disease, and also halted memory loss in mice in the trial.

This research, published in the Journal of Neuroscience took place in mice and no human trials have yet confirmed it.

New research ... immune cells that normally protect the brain instead begin to consume a vital nutrient, experts have found. Source: Supplied

The drug that was used to block the mouse immune response Difluoromethylornithine (DFMO), is already being investigated for use in cancer treatment.

Alzheimer's Australia chief executive Carol Bennett has welcomed the research.

"We welcome all research that looks at the effects of drugs that can halt Alzheimer's disease," she said.

"This looks promising in mice but we need to see some clinical trials," she said.

"If the drug is found to be effective it will be a few years before it becomes available," she said.

There are currently 342,000 Australians living with Alzheimer's disease and 1.2 million people caring for them.

The condition involves progressive and frequent memory loss, confusion, personality change, apathy and withdrawal and loss of ability to perform every day tasks.

Memory loss ... more than 342,000 Australians are currently living with Alzheimer's disease and the numbers are forecast to reach 900,000 by 2050. Picture supplied. Source: Supplied

Without major medical breakthroughs in the area it is predicted 900,000 Australians will be living with the disease by 2050.

"It is imperative we find a cure or prolong and delay the progression of the disease," Ms Bennett said.

The Federal Government is funding a risk reduction program for Alzheimer's called Your Brain Matters.

However, funding for the program that advises on diet, exercise and brain training exercises to prolong the progression of the disease runs out on June 30.

The number of people worldwide living with some form of dementia is set to reach 135 million by 2050.


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The thing that will stop Aussies going to Bali

Would you still travel to Bali if there was a booze ban in place? Source: Supplied

IT'S the one thing that could stop Aussies from travelling to Bali – and it's not what you think.

While there has been a lot of rhetoric that the impending deaths of Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan would affect tourism on the holiday island, sadly, latest figures show this is not the case.

The number of Australian tourists visiting Bali over the past two months has actually increased by 16.7 per cent from the same period last year.

According to Indonesia Institute president Ross Taylor the fate of the Bali Nine drug smugglers is probably third on Aussies list of concerns.

The ban on booze will be the one thing that would affect tourism.

From Thursday it will be illegal to sell alcohol in mini marts in Indonesia.

Beer and Bali go hand-in-hand for many Aussie tourists. Source: Supplied

Yet the proponents of the new law, two Islamic political parties, want to go one step further by making the selling, producing, distributing and consuming of alcohol containing more than one per cent illegal throughout Indonesia.

The proposal has yet to receive the wider support of the Indonesian government but if it does receive the backing of president Joko Widodo, it could come into effect as early as the end of this year.

Ross Taylor said while the finer details had yet to be discussed, the proposal had already "horrified" authorities in Bali.

"My own view would be that common sense would prevail ... but I'd be cautious in saying that because there are some of the more pronounced religious groups throughout Indonesia really gaining momentum now," Mr Taylor told AAP.

Schoolies party at the Bounty Nightclub in Kuta, Bali. Picture: Nathan Edwards Source: News Corp Australia

"In Aceh, they've introduced Sharia law. Very strictly. Even foreigners can be arrested in Aceh for not dressing appropriately."

Mr Taylor said nationalist sentiment was running high, with Indonesian authorities reviewing every property to ascertain whether it was being held on behalf of a foreigner.

"A lot of them are," he said.

"The state will either resume that property or offer the nominee the option of just keeping it for themselves, with no legal comeback from the foreign owner.

"So if you take that and the alcohol thing I think it's really symptomatic of a disturbing trend - and Indonesia is a country that stole my heart so I'm not anti-Indonesia - of the Jokowi government showing all the signs of being naive, dysfunctional and lost at the moment.


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Outrage over Woolworths’ Anzac website

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 14 April 2015 | 04.30

Woolworths is being slammed for incorporating their own branding into a campaign to commemorate ANZAC Day. Source: Facebook

WOOLWORTHS is copping a backlash for incorporating its own branding into a campaign it's launched to commemorate the centenary of Gallipoli on Anzac Day.

The supermarket chain has launched a website called "Fresh In Our Memories" — a name which is a play on the company's slogan of "The Fresh Food People".

The website presents "tribute stories" of soldiers, and information on Camp Gallipoli.

It also incorporates "profile picture" and "cover photo" generators — where users can upload a picture and have it stamped with the phrases "Lest we forget" and "Fresh in our memories" along with the Woolworths logo.

But the site is not sitting well with some Australians — with many taking to social media to slam the campaign as tasteless. The hashtags "#FreshInOurMemories" and "#BrandzacDay" are also gaining momentum.

People are also mocking the profile picture generators by loading non-Anzac related pictures and posting the memes on social media.


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Luxury cave with a million-dollar view

Take a look at a house built inside a cliff face. Courtesy: Jamie Andrei

Lionel Buckett's hideaway overlooks World Heritage rainforest. Source: Supplied

LIONEL Buckett sails through life with his head in the clouds and his feet deeply planted in the ground.

His family have owned large swathes of land in the Blue Mountains since the 1950s, and he has now carved out a fantasy cave cabin looking out over some of Australia's most magnificent bushland.

"I've got lots of connections with this beautiful place," he says of his 600 acres of land verged by World Heritage listed rainforest.

The fairytale interior is carved from sandstone and ironstone. Source: Supplied

A small wooden door opens to steps and seats carved into the rock. Source: Supplied

The incredible creation blends into the landscape. Source: Supplied

His long labour of love has been made into a short film. Source: Supplied

Up on a natural rock platform, he has built a spectacular concrete and steel construction with a small, round wooden door and a sandstone kitchen.

The fairytale bathroom has a hand-carved stone basin, long-drop toilet and an outdoor shower so guests can feel as though they're standing under a waterfall.

Double-glazed glass doors seal off the cave in bad weather, but Lionel prefers to keep them open. "You can see the clouds, hear the water," he tells news.com.au. "I sit there and feel as though I've gone a million years back in time. It hasn't changed in ten million, and it was an active volcano 20 million years ago.

"There's been no human interference. It's easy to be inspired when you look at that."

Lionel is skilled in building, carpentry and bricklaying after years turning fantastical ideas into reality. Source: Supplied

Lionel, 55, has been dreaming up wild projects like this for years, honing his skills building eco-friendly holiday cabins and a remarkable treehouse with its own spa and kitchen.

He uses convict tools and energy-efficient design features, including solar power and a corkscrew copper pipe that captures waste heat.

Jamie Andrei, who has made a short film about Lionel's extraordinary project for TedxSydney's 2015 film program, describes the cave as "Grand Designs meets Gaudi".

"Living in the city, I've got a lot of mates who say they'll do this or that and never do," he told news.com.au. "The cave feels rock-solid in its protected nook. It's amazing to see. The sunsets are stunning, the birds fly past, you can unwind in the stillness. It's a little sanctuary."

The view of the Blue Mountains is spectacular. Source: Supplied

Lionel's family have lived on this land for more than 50 years. Source: Supplied

The 55-year-old wanted the construction to look organic. Source: Supplied

Living sustainably and in harmony with this beautiful land is his priority. Source: Supplied

Lionel's company, Australian Hardwood Homes, was using sustainable building techniques decades ahead of others, and it's left the Gerringong-born designer with a coterie of talented associates to help make his visions come to life.

"I have a stonemason friend who does fine carvings," he says. "He carved a lobster, a platypus and a pheasant's tail out ironstone and set it in the roof."

The Aboriginal-style carvings are similar to ones seen in the rock nearby, and they tell a story.

Lieutenant Bowen, who used to chop down wood here in 1830, wrote in his diary that he didn't like hanging out with convicts, so he started hanging out with an Aboriginal group. They had lunch together, they would borrow his food, and they brought him presents: baby platypus that inspired the name of the creek; yabbies; and the lyre birds that imitate the sounds of Lionel's power tools.

"People are gobsmacked by the sheer beauty of the land," he says. "It's spectacularly beautiful."

He's almost ready to share his magical creation with the rest of the world, starting with guests he already knows. But the building remains movable.

"I might change it," he adds airily. "Depending on my experiences, how the sun sets, how the winds change."

Visit the TedxSydney website to find out more about 2015's film program, which promises to engage and educate in unexpected ways.


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Madonna’s pash stuns horrified Drake

Written By Unknown on Senin, 13 April 2015 | 04.29

Look out ... Madonna pashes singer Drake on-stage at Coachella. Source: Getty Images

SHE's never been one for holding back when it comes to the on-stage kisses with the opposite — or same — sex.

But Madonna wouldn't have been expecting the horrified reaction of Canadian singer Drake when she unexpectedly French-kissed him while performing at Coachella.

TEN MOST AWKWARD CELEBRITY KISSES

After belting out her classic song of female empowerment Express Yourself, the 56-year-old pop legend pulled the 28-year-old singer back in his chair to plant a heavy kiss on his lips.

To the screams of fans, the pair made out for at least three seconds.

Cougar town ... Drake looks slightly scared as Madonna goes on the prowl at Coachella. Source: Getty Images

What Madonna didn't see was the shocked musician's horrified expression after she went in for her mega pash, even wiping his mouth afterwards.

Like a tiger ... Madonna didn't hold back when she French-kissed Drake. Source: Getty Images

Dressed in thigh-high black boots and a T-shirt bearing the slogan "Big as Madonna", the mother of four was in typical feisty form as she promoted her album Rebel Heart.

Perhaps the age difference of almost 30 years was a bit too much for the seriously unimpressed Drake — who has dated pop diva Rhianna — to handle.


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Fired up JT blows Bunnies away

NRL: Watch as the video referee makes two controversial calls in the closing stages of the first half between South Sydney and North Queensland

Johnathan Thurston inspired the Cowboys to a big win over the Rabbitohs. Source: Getty Images

IT was billed publicly as Inglis versus Thurston. And up for grabs was the mantle as rugby league's premier player.

Johnathan Thurston, you're the king.

Thurston was simply superb again on Monday night as North Queensland upset premiers South Sydney 30-12 at ANZ Stadium.

As sublime as Inglis can be, it is impossible to place anyone in the game ahead of Thurston at the moment.

Frighteningly for NSW, both are Queenslanders.

Thurston's form is top-shelf as NSW struggle to nail down a halfback and five-eighth this season.

As Immortal Andrew Johns told Triple M on Monday night: "The performance of (incumbent NSW halves) Josh Reynolds and Trent Hodkinson (on Sunday) really worried me. I'm terrified about the form of the halfback and five-eighth of NSW."

Thurston scored two tries and set up another in a scintillating individual performance. You can easily run out of superlatives to describe Thurston.

Antonio Winterstein is wrapped up by the Rabbitohs' defence. Source: News Corp Australia

Many speak of his attacking brilliance but few recognise Thurston's toughness. Gorden Tallis rates Thurston the toughest player in the NRL.

Thurston takes the ball to the line week after week, season after season. He gets whacked, smashed and belted yet continues to star in one of the world's most physically ferocious sports.

Inglis was good again on Monday night, no doubt.

These two, it would seem, will battle and jostle throughout the season as the game's two premier players.

Inglis though is just a magic performance or two from reclaiming top spot.

North Queensland have now won three successive games, all on Monday nights. It was the Cowboys' fourth straight win over Souths.

They are a side that could prove extremely dangerous in September, given they don't cop another refereeing howler. The Cowboys have one of the best balanced sides in the NRL.

Souths' loss means Brisbane is now outright competition leaders after six rounds.

The Rabbitohs led 12-4 at half-time before North Queensland scored in the opening minute of the second half to put some zing back into the game.

Who would you give three Dally M points to?

From there it was one-sided.

A penalty goal to Thurston soon after levelled the scores at 12-all before the visitors hit the front for the first time in the 65th minute when winger Antonio Winterstein flashed over out wide.

Thurston landed another sideline conversion, North Queensland having scored 14 points in opening 15 minutes of the second half.

North Queensland then went on with the job to destroy Souths.

South Sydney could not have started in a more impressive way by scoring in just the second minute of play. And it was soft too.

Rabbitohs forward Dave Tyrrell surged over from first receiver to stun the Cowboys. Issac Luke converted to give Souths a 6-0 lead.

Jason Taumalolo had a superb game for the Cowboys. Source: News Corp Australia

North Queensland though didn't let the try upset them.

Only six minutes later the Cowboys scored their first try through replacement winger Justin O'Neill, who outleapt Souths winger Alex Johnston to catch a Thurston bomb on the full to score.

Souths kicked further ahead midway through the first half when North Queensland fumbled to send Souths on the attack. From the next play, Glenn Stewart and Greg Inglis sent Johnston over in the corner. Luke converted to give his side a 12-4 lead.

That was the end of Souths' joy.

North Queensland had a try disallowed right on half-time for obstruction. It was a 50/50 call, most on social media blowing up about the decision.

NORTH QUEENSLAND 30 (J Thurston 2 J Granville J O'Neill A Winterstein tries J Thurston 5 goals) bt SOUTH SYDNEY 12 (A Johnston D Tyrrell tries I Luke 2 goals) at ANZ Stadium. Referee: Alan Shortall, Adam Devcich. Crowd: 13,866.

Re-live all the action in our live blog below!

Originally published as Fired up JT blows Bunnies away
04.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

‘I went from broke to millionaire’

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 12 April 2015 | 04.29

Traveller Will Hatton had bundles of cash in Venezuela. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

"YOU will be robbed, there's no avoiding that. Just don't fight it or they will kill you."

This was the advice that Will Hatton, a 26-year-old traveller who explores some of the world's least-visited countries on an extreme budget, received when he announced he was going to explore Venezuela.

He tells news.com.au what it's really like in a country with more oil than anywhere else in the world — and the second-highest murder rate. As he quickly discovered, it's also a place that can make the average traveller feel rich.

Locals engage in fiery protests on the streets. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

The streets of Merida were alive with activity, an aura of menace hung heavily in the air. A blockade glinted in the afternoon sun, and black smoke from burning tyres spiralled into the sky.

"We must go around," my taxi driver said.

He gunned the ancient car into reverse and fled, anxious to be gone before the police arrived with their gas, batons and rubber bullets.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro collected over 10 million signatures from across Venezuela, which he presented at a rally in Caracas, Thursday, calling on US President Barack Obama to withdraw a decree declaring Venezuela a security threat. Speaking after the rally, which was also attended by Bolivian President Evo Morales, Maduro said he believes in better relations between the empire of the United States and a free and sovereign Latin America, but one that is based on respect and non-interference. Maduro will meet US President Barack Obama at the 7th Summit of the Americas in Panama City on Friday, where he plans to present him with the millions of collected signatures.

But civil unrest was everywhere. Gangs of students in red shirts marched towards the city centre, spraying walls with graffiti. Police in urban camouflage stood shoulder to shoulder with the infamous Guardia Nacional (national guard), AKs strapped to their chests. They eyed the protesters suspiciously, ready at any minute to advance upon the hothead who dared aim a firework at their ranks.

My driver swore in Spanish and mounted the kerb. An armoured vehicle of some kind, water cannon at the ready, rolled past us with its siren blazing. We retreated from the noise down side-streets, passing more flimsy barricades as we made our way towards the quieter barrios of the city.

They faced off with the police. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

I was dropped off near a lush park, the obligatory statue of famous military leader Simon Bolivar, sword at the ready, in the centre. A pair of backpackers strolled past, snacking on empanadas and gulping down steaming black coffee. This was apparently the "touristic centre".

I looked for someone to change some money with, and was pointed towards a nearby shop. I entered and spoke in hushed tones with the lady behind the desk who then began to make calls.

Two hours later a man in a dark suit appeared, firmly clutching a grocery bag. He rushed in and closed the door. A rent-a-thug stood nearby with what looked like a metal chair leg in one hand, watching me carefully.

While there are dangers in Merida, there's no doubt it's a picturesque place. Source: Getty Images

The harassed-looking money changer emptied the bag onto the table. Hundreds of coloured bills spilt across the table. I handed over a single hundred dollar bill and began the laborious task of tying up notes with elastic bands, I had well over 1000 notes to count. I had been in Venezuela just 24 hours and already I was a millionaire here.

For a single US dollar ($1.31) I could buy 12 beers, get a bed for the night, take two taxis or eat in a nice restaurant. I could fill up a car at a local gas-station for 2 bolivars, around 1 US cent.

So much cash, not enough hands. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

So with wads of cash stuffed down my trousers and in my bag I left the store and checked into a hotel across the road. Then I went back outside, anxious to find out more about what the hell was going on; the sound of sirens, car alarms and fireworks, eerily similar to gunfire, drifted over the city like a haze.

I was surprised to see many Venezuelans going about what appeared to be their normal business. I entered a cafe, an oasis of calm in a city that appeared to be on the brink of revolution. Here I watched a woman with a ludicrous bum implant flirt with a moustachioed waiter with a healthy paunch. He appeared to be punching above his weight.

Across from me sat a gangly man in a chequered shirt, a pair of spectacles dangling from his face. I approached him and in my rudimentary Spanish attempted to ask him what was going on. He answered in English, a promising start. Roberto was preparing to leave the country and keen to share his insights on why he could no longer stay in his homeland.

He says he had no choice. Ten years ago, his father, a university professor, earned around $2000 a month. Today, due to rampant inflation, he earns just $60 a month for the same job. Many Venezuelans earn even less, at the official exchange rate most people can hope to pocket just $20 a month.

Those who have managed to get hold of actual dollars can live like kings and continue to invest their money in more dollars; in Venezuela, the value of dollars only seems to go up week on week.

Will came here for adventure, something he definitely got. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

"If you have dollars, you can live very well for just $50 a week," he said. "Without dollars, life in Venezuela is too expensive and it's impossible to get basics, even a toilet roll has to be bought on the black market!"

I had come to Venezuela hearing these rumours and had packed accordingly; my bag was stuffed with 12 rolls of toilet paper.

He explained that people are forced to queue for hours to buy essentials like powdered milk, bread and rice. Roberto was tired of queuing, he dreamt of a fully stocked fridge and a brimming medicine cabinet.

"We're importing everything and it's still not enough."

Locals wait in long lines to purchase fuel. Source: Getty Images

Venezuela should be the richest country in all of South America, the country has the largest oil reserves in the world and a full tank of gasoline (around 60 litres) costs just 5 bolivars, about $1. A litre of bottled water on the other hand costs nearly 30 bolivars, over 100 times more than a litre of gasoline.

Roberto says that Venezuela is now importing gasoline, a travesty for a country where oil bubbles freely from the ground.

So what does the future hold for Venezuela?

"Bloodshed, lots of bloodshed."

With plummeting oil prices, rising inflation, increasing shortages and the clamouring voices of a million unheard souls, it's a recipe for disaster.

Roberto cautioned me to be careful, this was no adventure playground, this was a country with one of the highest murder-rates in the world. And he's not the only one — everyone I'd spoken to wanted to know the same thing; after hearing about all the kidnappings, corruption, robberies and murders, why the hell was I here?

Sure, most people wouldn't dream of visiting Venezuela, believing it's not worth the risk. But I hoped against hope that they were wrong, that the dirt-cheap prices and stunning sites would outweigh the risk of danger.

Roraima is a famous -and stunning — mountain in Venezuela. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

One of the main reasons I came here was for Roraima — the highest table top mountain in the world. I dreamt of climbing it.

So I did. And as I stumped up a slippery path hacked into the jungle it seemed more likely I would break my neck than be robbed at gunpoint. Oozing, sucking mud pulled at my ankles as I struggled upwards, my pack, laden with supplies and camping gear.

This was a far-cry from the endless plains of the Gran Sabana. I had spent the first day hiking through dusty valleys, crossing rumbling rivers and generally just being eaten alive by swarms of pori-pori, horrible biting flies the size of a pinhead.

It was a tricky climb. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

For five hours I slipped and hauled myself up the path, passing through banks of cloud and under a tumbling waterfall. Mist engulfed me, and visibility was less than 10 metres.

Finally, I reached the summit. I was at last on top of the tabletop mountain that had inspired Arthur Conan Doyle's Lost World. Roraima, a magnet for thrillseekers and adventurers, a grave for the ill-prepared.

Another tabletop mountain called Kukenan, a holy place for the indigenous peoples scattered across the plains, appeared through a window in the dancing mist. I had just a few seconds to appreciate the patchwork quilt of purples, oranges, reds and greens making up the mountain-face before it disappeared, devoured by clouds.

There were seemingly never-ending valleys. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

I spent the next day exploring the tabletop, bathing in a series of freezing pools and admiring valleys filled with crystals, an otherworldly site. Roraima, like Venezuela itself, was not what I had expected. The mountain and the country could both be deadly, but it had taken my breath away.

Seeing crystals everywhere was a sight for sore eyes. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

It definitely has a commanding appearance. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

The warmth and generosity I experienced in this wonderful, frustrating, insane and beautiful country had surpassed my wildest dreams. Everywhere, I had been made to feel welcome, at no point had I felt in any real danger, Venezuelans had gone to great lengths to keep me from harm. I had made staunch friends.

Though it's troubles, Venezuela has some beautiful sights. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

The true Venezuela, like Roraima, is masked. It is impossible to get a full picture, simply snapshots of truth through a fleeting window.

In fact, it rocks. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied

Will Hatton writes about travelling on a budget over at The Broke Backpacker.

It was a trip he'll never forget. Picture: Will Hatton Source: Supplied


04.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

10 most terrifying roads ever

Trolstigen road is one of the dangerous trips. Source: Getty Images

IF YOU just can't feel satisfied without navigating hairpin turns, dizzying elevations, and gravel surfaces with no guardrails to protect you, we've got you covered with this bucket list of freaky routes.

Some of these are highly travelled destination roads, some get very little traffic, and others are obscure to most drivers. But if you can patiently and carefully handle them in the proper vehicle, you'll be rewarded with some tasty visual treats, plus access to unique mountain-climbing and cycling adventures.

We'd tell you to buckle up, but we're not sure how much even doing that will help you here (of course, do it though!):

Road of Death (North Yungas), Bolivia

Death Road in Bolivia. Picture: AHLN Source: Flickr

There's nothing ironic about the name of this 61 kilometre journey that goes from over 4570 metres in La Paz to 1188m in Coroico — it is the black widow of roads. Its claim to fame is being named the world's most dangerous road by the Inter-American Development Bank, and it's estimated that 200 to 300 people travelling on it die each year.

It's not hard to see why the road is so dangerous: It's barely the width of one vehicle, with no guardrail to protect you from falls of up to 609m. Rain can make the road muddy and slippery, and rain or fog can reduce a driver to feeling blindfolded.

Still, there's a siren song here that attracts thousands of people, from danger-loving tourists to hardcore cyclists. The view of the Amazonian rainforest is astounding, and standing right over the sheer drops here will bring out the lemming in many of us. Tour groups that serve the road include Barracuda Biking and Gravity Bolivia.

Lippincott Mine Road, Death Valley National Park, California

This little-used 11km route in and out of the park near the famous Racetrack Playa really puts the "Death" in Death Valley. It's a faster route to the park than others, but you might be clenching your jaw the whole way, trying not to fall hundreds of feet to oblivion, and it's not for the casual driver or the casual car. This is four-wheel-drive territory only.

My friend Doug did the honour of driving us out of Death Valley via Lippincott at the end of our camping trip last fall, and by the time we had slowly descended the almost 600m drop, I felt like the park had chewed us up and spat us out into Saline Valley.

What could kill you here? Let us count the ways. There are no guardrails, and there is the constant threat of a steep fall if you're not careful — at times, there's just a foot or two of gravelly space to navigate. You'll be driving around or over some large rocks that could break your vehicle, and if that doesn't do it, the park's intense heat could if you're making the climb into Death Valley during the hotter months. There's no towing service, no water source, no road signs and no cell reception. Other than that, this drive is like Christmas.

Still, competent drivers in the right vehicle can make this trip safely. Make sure you stop along the way to capture some gorgeous views of the valley below. Also, if you enter the park this way, you're just three miles from the Racetrack and its otherworldly beauty. Just play some Metallica at full blast, as we did in this video clip, to give you the adrenaline rush you need to survive.

Dalton Highway, Alaska

The frozen Dalton Highway. Source: AFP

While the Road to Hana is seductively warm and dangerous, this frosty, gravelly, pothole-laden route is as seductive as a White Walker in Game of Thrones. The Dalton Highway was opened for one thing: transporting oil. And it covers 666km of desolate, icy terrain.

This is the route of Ice Road Truckers fame, and you'll have to excuse the truckers for thinking you're crazy if you want to drive this highway for fun. Let's put aside the freezing cold and often miserable road conditions, with 18-wheelers pounding your vehicle with ice. On a single 386km stretch, there are no service stations, restaurants or basic services — the longest such stretch in North America. There are three — count 'em, three — service stations the entire way. And don't count on cell service at all.

Still, there are enticements to taking your chances here. You can say you've crossed into the Arctic Circle, which the highway does. And if you visit at the right time, you can slowly pull over and watch the northern lights.

A guide is highly recommended here unless you know your survival skills, as you'll need to pack provisions, including fuel. And be on the lookout for freeway closures, such as the one that happened just after flooding from the Sagavanirktok River.

Trollstigen Mountain Road, Norway

One of the turns on the Trollstigen pass, Norway. Source: Getty Images

As dangerous roads go, this is among the most visited in the world, and for good reason: It overlooks a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Geirangerfjord on the west coast of Norway. I'd like to say that I gave death a noogie as I raced this road's 11 hairpin turns and 9 per cent incline in an Alfa Romeo, but in fact, I slowly weaved through it on a large tour bus. Next time, I swear.

Dangerous conditions here include the incline, narrow driving space, and the poor traction and visibility that come with rain and fog. But oh man, those views: There are ideal photography opportunities where you can pull over and capture the fjords and lush valleys below, and waterfalls so close you can touch them.

Note: The road closes in October and opens in May.

Road to Hana, Maui, Hawaii

It's a stunning trip, but be cautious. Source: Getty Images

Paradise is worth the risk, which is why the 67km of Highway 360 to Hana in eastern Maui are such a tourist favourite. You'll have to navigate through and around 600 hairpin turns, 54 one-lane bridges, steep cliff drops, falling rocks, and even some confusing mile markers that reset. Plus it rains often, so there's that.

But the rewards for your risk are considerable: You probably won't have time for them all, in fact. The road itself is full of pull-over-right-now photography opportunities, but venture deeper and you'll find such rare beauties as Wai'anapanapa State Park's black sand beach, Twin Falls, Wailua Falls, and the laid-back charm of Paia Town.

Drive slow and you'll be fine here — you'd better, in fact, because police strictly enforce the 25-mph speed limit.

Fairy Meadows Road, Pakistan

Is climbing the world's ninth-highest mountain not challenging enough for you? Fine. Just try driving to the base of it. If you want to climb Nanga Parbat, you'll have to ascend six death-defying miles to Fairy Meadows. The gravel road is completely unmaintained, there are no guardrails to protect you, and it gets so narrow that near the end you'll have to cover the last section by walking or biking.

The road is prone to avalanches and heavy snowfall, and it closes in the winter.

Skippers Canyon Road, Queenstown, New Zealand

Welcome to a road so dangerous, your rental car insurance won't be honoured if you drive on it. Only one other road in New Zealand has that honour.

Yet you will be tempted to drive this one-lane, twisting terror with steep drops because it abounds with natural beauty and photo ops, including the Shotover River directly below you. Skippers Canyon Road is cut into the side of a mountain and extends 26km in New Zealand's South Island, 40km from Queenstown. It's considered one of the country's most scenic routes. The miners who built the road in the late 1800s didn't think much about luxury, though — it's unpaved and very narrow. Should you encounter a car driving the other way, one of you will have to back up gingerly until you can find enough room to pass. Good luck figuring out which of you that will be.

For an adventure trip, you can hire a tour bus to do the driving for you, such as a jet boating tour with Skippers Canyon Jet.

Skipper Canyon. Picture: Russellstreet Source: Flickr

Los Caracoles Pass, Chile

If you impressed yourself by driving down the curves of Lombard Street in San Francisco, this is just like that, only 1000 times more challenging. Called the "Snails Pass" by locals, this serpentine mountain pass in the Andes connects Santiago, Chile, to Mendoza, Argentina. It reaches 3200m in elevation, and this being the Andes, it's known for getting heavy snowfall: About 15,000 travellers were stranded for 10 hours on the Argentine side in 2013, when the road had to be closed because of snow and cold.

When you reach the summit of this road, you'll pass through the Cristo Redentor tunnel, and the heaviest, steepest switchbacks are on the Chilean side. You may need tire chains and plenty of patience to make it through here, but if you take your time, you should be able to avoid an accident.

Karakorum "Friendship" Highway, China and Pakistan

A bridge in the Karakorum area. Source: Getty Images

For some real altitude, take your chances with this 1287km drive. At 4693m, it's the highest paved international road in the world. And you can get a sense of how dangerous it is just by knowing that about 1000 workers died building this freeway before it opened in 1979.

The road's nickname stems from the collaboration between China and Pakistan in building it, but it can be unfriendly in practice, with little driving room, sheer drops, no pavement on the Pakistani side and flash floods.

However, Karakorum is an adventure lover's delight. Comprising part of the old Silk Road trade route, it offers views of soaring mountain peaks such as the K2 (second-highest mountain in the world), massive glaciers such as the Baltoro, and sprawling rivers such as the Indus.

\Bayburt Of Yolu-D915, Turkey

This road is arguably more dangerous than any other on this list. The D915 connects the Turkish cities of Bayburt and Of, near the Black Sea, and it spans 106km. It has many of the same hazards of the Death Road in Bolivia: It's only a lane wide in some sections and unpaved, with elevation exceeding 1980m and no guardrails protecting you from certain death. The often-poor weather adds to the danger.

Says the website Dangerousroads.org, "Words can't describe the road and pictures don't do it justice … the steep part is simply terrible. Curvy roads descending down the cliffs, often so narrow that you cannot turn the first time."

There are 29 hairpins turns, and things get gnarly in Çaykara, where the road climbs from 521m to 619, in just 5km, with 13 hairpin turns.

This article originally appeared on Yahoo Travel and was republished via the NYPost.


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How this meme changed Russian law

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 11 April 2015 | 04.29

The meme in question. Source: Supplied

RUSSIA has already outlawed cussing in all forms of media and has banned films that threaten national unity.

Now, it has taken its radical restrictions on freedom of expression to the next level by banning memes.

According to Roskomnadzor, it's now illegal to use a celebrity in a meme that has no association to the pictured celebrity.

The controversial policy was introduced after a Moscow court ruled Russian singer, Valeri Syutkin, had his privacy violated by a particular meme.

The meme in question contains a picture of the romantic singer and the text "BBPE", which is a reference to a song by an ambiguous musician named Nambavan (Number One).

Taken from on Nambavan's 2005 album titled "Sex, Drugs, and Russian Girls", BBPE is an acronym for the phrase "Bei Babu Po Ebalu" meaning "Smack the b*tch in the Face."

According to Lurkmore, the meme based on the offensive lyrics first surfaced on the Russian imageboard 2ch.ru in 2008.

Users first posted the link to the music video as an insult to one another, before they started overlaying the "BBPE" phrase on images of Russian celebrities.

Pop star Phillip Kirkorov and actor Aleksey Panin were the first targets, but the face of the meme eventually became Valeri Syutkin.

The romantic singer was selected because his gentle persona and large female fan base made him the last person to act the way the lyrics describe.

Syutkin, said it was his mother who convinced him to take the case to the courts. "I know I'm not alone here," he told Izvestia.

"I want to help instil some order on the RuNet, so personal data is used with respect."


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Playsuit too racy for Randwick

Championships Day at Royal Randwick Racecourse. Pictured are ladies lining up for Fashions on the Field. Source: News Corp Australia

THE racing fashion police were out in force today, with country music singer Amber Lawrence refused entry to Royal Randwick's members' area for failing to meet the required sartorial standard.

The multiple Golden Guitar-winning singer was turned away from the racecourse after her black laser-cut playsuit was deemed 'inappropriate'.

"I went to walk through the gates and they told me I wasn't allowed to wear a playsuit," Lawrence told Confidential.

"They said, 'You have stockings on which is great, but you just can't wear a playsuit so we can't let you in'.

"I didn't look up the dress rules but I thought I looked respectable and was ready for a great day."

Amber's mini skirt and matching top no problem. Source: News Corp Australia

Amber's cute playsuit was just too race for Randwick. Source: Supplied

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The rise, fall and rise (again) of Lara Bingle

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 10 April 2015 | 04.30

Lara Bingle has endured a raft of controversies over recent years. Source: Supplied

WHEN this piece is posted online or featured in print, many of you will be moved — more so than for most other subjects — to post a comment, email the editor or even put pen to paper to write an old-school letter. Some of it will be positive, the bulk will be negative. "Why are you writing about her?" "Who cares?" "Slow news day?"

Lara Bingle has that kind of effect. But whether you love her, hate her or love to hate her, there's no doubt we're still enamoured with her every move, despite the fact she resides half a planet away these days (or maybe because of it).

Bingle is our own Paris Hilton: seemingly devoid of the traditional pillars of fame — sporting prowess, singing ability or acting chops — and simply famous for being famous, beautiful and a bit of all right in a bathing suit.

For the past decade, since she burst on to the scene all bubbly, bikini-clad and sweary in Tourism Australia's controversial "Where the bloody hell are you?" ad campaign, her personal life and many controversial relationships have provided constant fodder.

Drama followed Bingle and Bingle seemingly did everything in her power to court it — engagement rings reportedly thrown down the toilet when her engagement to cricket star Michael Clarke went much the same way, a nude photo scandal involving AFL bad boy Brendan Fevola and links to a string of men including Sydney nightclub identity John Ibrahim, Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman Anthony Kiedis, US rapper Jason Derulo and British rugby player Danny Cipriani.

The nude phone picture of Lara naked in the shower, taken by AFL footballer Brendan Fevola in 2006. Source: Supplied

We've had Bingle the swimsuit model, the reality TV star, the cricket WAG, the entrepreneur, the restaurateur, the rotten driver.

But now surely her best title to date — new mum.

Bingle, 27, welcomed a baby boy, reportedly on March 24 at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles — the birthplace of celebrity offspring including Harper Beckham and North West — with her partner/boyfriend/fiance/husband, Avatar actor Sam Worthington.

We say reportedly because the pregnancy was never officially confirmed by Bingle, let alone
the birth. Ditto her relationship status with Worthington. (Though Bingle did break her silence last week to confirm the baby's name — Rocket Zot — when she lashed out via social media at those in the media who knocked the unusual moniker. For the record, both names are nods to the couple's fathers.)

Persistent pregnancy rumours were unofficially confirmed in January when Bingle showed off an obvious baby bump for the first time in a white T-shirt while holidaying in Palm Springs. Earlier shots of her shopping for infant clothes at Baby Dior in Paris and hazy underwater pool snaps of a rounded belly on Instagram had added to the whispers.

Lara Bingle shopping at the Cotton On store in Santa Monica, California. Picture: Mike Windle/Getty Images Source: Getty Images

The rumours that she and Worthington, 38, had secretly wed began months before, sparked when Worthington referred to Bingle as his wife during his now-infamous scuffle with a paparazzo in New York in February last year. In December, Bingle changed her name on her Instagram account to Lara Bingle Worthington and in a recent blog post for her beauty brand, The Base, made reference to her husband.

(If they have tied the knot, their secret ceremony would have presumably been a far cry from the lavish, high-profile affair she and former fiance Clarke would have had if their engagement party — a star-studded soiree at Sydney's Luna Park with photos from the night sold to a magazine — was anything to go by.)

Lara Bingle and partner Sam Worthington. Source: Supplied

What we do know is that since hooking up with Worthington after meeting through mutual friend and singer Natalie Imbruglia in New York in late 2013, Bingle has done an abrupt about-face when it comes to sharing details of her private life. Once one of the most prolific life-sharers on social media, she deleted many personal photos from her accounts including every photo of Worthington, who ditched his Instagram account altogether.

Was she told by her (ever-changing) management team to lie low?

Are Worthington's notoriously private ways rubbing off on her? Or is she just finally happy, settled and content to live her life away from the spotlight?

Regardless of her reason, as the saying goes, absence makes the heart grow fonder. Since Bingle moved Stateside, away from the Sydney fishbowl, the celebrity appetite for her hasn't waned. Even in her silence, Bingle makes news. She still sells magazines, we still want to know her next move.

When she posted on Instagram last month a photo of a beach at sunset with words "arrived at the perfect time today", it was immediately taken as "the baby is here" and made headlines from Mallacoota to Mandurah.

A pregnant Lara Bingle pictured on the cover of OK Magazine. Source: Supplied

BUT Paula Joye knows that Bingle polarises, too. The former editor of Cleo, Shop Til You Drop and Madison magazines runs her own fashion and lifestyle blog, The Joye. When she featured Bingle in November about The Base, the negative feedback prompted Joye to censor and delete comments on her blog for the first time.

Joye wrote: "She has one of the truly great faces, an extraordinary beauty that seems to be getting more spectacular with age. There's a new confidence to the girl from Cronulla, whose impossibly blue eyes and tawny tan made millions of people want to visit Australia."

Comments like this summed up the anti-Bingle sentiment: "Is it Bimbo Week?! Sick of these idiots being worshipped. They're a bad example for young women."

Lara Bingle has reinvented herself. Source: Supplied

Joye hit back.

"I think that beautiful women provoke polarising reactions," she says. "I've known Lara since she was 17 and I'm proud of the young woman she's become."

When Bingle collaborated with Geelong-based retail giant Cotton On in 2013 on a swimwear range, then general manager Teri Naccarato labelled Bingle "the quintessential Bondi Beach girl.

"Born and raised in the golden sunshine of the east coast, Lara has grown to be one of our most loved swimsuit models and television personalities."

And you know you've entered the zeitgeist when bookie Sportingbet take punts on you. At $7, Jake — Worthington's character's name in Avatar — was the hot favourite for Bingle bub's name, with Michael — after Bingle's cricketer ex — a long shot at $101. If only someone had put money on Rocket Zot!

Bingle has come the full circle in the past decade. From being Australia's answer to Posh and Becks with Clarke — the high-profile glamour couple with the sun-kissed good looks, the beachfront apartment and VIP invites for every night of the week — and then single, footloose and fancy-free, Bingle is now in another long-term relationship but one that's mature and private. It's seemingly on Worthington's terms. More than 10 years Bingle's senior, he doesn't do public gaze, he doesn't do attention-seeking and he's clearly no fan of the pesky paps.

The couple are now reportedly househunting in LA's up-market Los Feliz area and planning a holistic lifestyle for their newborn, already signing him up to yoga classes and an alternative school where rabbits and chickens roam the grounds.

Just don't expect a magazine deal when little Rocket Worthington enters the school gates for the first time, but plenty of paparazzi eager for the shot that lands them a highly paid magazine cover.

THE TIMELINE OF LARA'S LIFE

The 'Where the bloody hell are ya?' ad. Source: News Corp Australia

June 22, 1987: Born in Cronulla, NSW.

February 2006: Shoots to fame as the bikini-clad blonde in Tourism Australia's "Where the bloody hell are you?" campaign (right). The ads are banned from British television after the slogan is deemed too risqué.

July 2006: Is runner-up on Channel 9's celebrity ice-skating show Torvill and Dean's Dancing on Ice. Nine later hires Bingle to promote its Ashes coverage dressed in cricket pads and a bikini and as a reporter on travel show Holidays for Sale.

March 2008: Her boyfriend of 18 months, cricketer Michael Clarke, pops the question in New York. The pair hold a lavish engagement party at Sydney's Luna Park.

Bikini-clad Lara donned a bikini to promote cricket. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

May 2008: Bingle's dad Graham, 55, dies from liver and pancreatic cancer. Bingle gets a tattoo on her wrist in his honour that reads, "Wish you were here."

December 2009: Bingle's $300,000 Aston Martin, a present from Clarke, is stolen from the couple's Bondi home. The car is found two days later with only minor damage. A boy, 14, charged with its theft brags to police that he'd made the news.

Lara Bingle and her Aston Martin. Picture: Paul McConnell/Snappermedia Source: Supplied

March 2, 2010: Begins (but never goes through with) legal proceedings against AFL footballer Brendon Fevola after a nude photo he took of her in the shower during their 2006 affair is published in Woman's Day. Bingle later pockets $200,000 from the same magazine for selling her side of the story.

Michael Clarke and Lara in happier times. Source: News Limited

March 12, 2010: Clarke's management confirms he and Bingle have ended their engagement. The split comes amid rumours Bingle flushed her $200,000 engagement ring down the toilet, prompting an urgent call to a plumbing company.

December 2010: Bingle is dropped as the face of swimwear brand Speedo, losing her $250,00 a year contract. She is replaced by former Miss Universe finalist Rachael Finch.

The awkward magazine spread. Source: News Limited

April 2011: Invests in Torquay pub Growlers with paparazzi agency owner-turned-Geelong mayor Darryn Lyons. (Neither party now has a stake in the business.)

June 2011: Competes on Dancing with the Stars and is slammed by judge Todd McKenney for being dull and lacking the X-factor. Bingle is eliminated three weeks in.

July 2011: Pics of a loved-up Bingle holidaying in Bora Bora with a new man, rugby player Danny Cipriani, appear in a woman's mag in a lucrative deal reportedly stitched up by Bingle herself. Bingle later admits Cipriani dumped her while the mag was still on shelves.

June 2012:Being Lara Bingle premieres on Channel 10. The 10-part reality series shows Bingle doing ear candling and having colonic irrigation. Series isn't renewed for a second season.

September 2012: Fined $3500, banned from driving for a year and given an 18-month good behaviour bond in court for driving while suspended and fleeing the scene of a traffic accident. Fronts court again last year for driving on a cancelled licence and is ordered to complete a six-week traffic offenders' program.

Being Lara Bingle on Channel 10. Source: Supplied

January 2013: Single again after splitting with her fashion designer beau of 14 months, Gareth Moody, who she credited with helping her lose 12kg.

October 2013: Confirms she's dating Avatar star Sam Worthington. Moves to New York to live with him.

November 2013: Launches her swimwear range for Cotton On.

Lara leaves court after pleading guilty to a driving charge. Source: News Limited

February 2014: Worthington is arrested in New York for assault after allegedly punching paparazzo Sheng Li. The couple, who are due in court this month over the $10.8 million lawsuit, say Li prompted the stoush, following them for four hours before kicking Bingle.

November 2014: Launches a new tanning and skincare range called The Base.

December 2014: Changes name on Instagram account to Lara Bingle Worthington, fuelling speculation the pair have wed.

March 2015: Bingle and Worthington welcome son Rocket Zot in Los Angeles, where they are said to be househunting.


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‘How I found myself again on the Kokoda Track’

Laura Dundovic and Erin Holland at the launch of their #DoKokoda documentary. Source: Supplied

WHEN former Miss Universe Australia Laura Dundovic and former Miss World Australia Erin Holland traded their high heels for hiking boots, they never expected they'd each return "a different person".

The girls, who completed the 96km Kokoda Track in October last year, say the experience was a life-changing one, away from the "superficial" nature of the industry that made them famous.

"It sounds really cliche but I found myself as a person again," Holland, 26, told news.com.au.

"It's a very cleansing experience and particularly being in the industry we're in, where our hectic lifestyle can be ruled by social media, it's amazing to get back to the world. You're out there (in the jungle), you're tired, you're dirty, you're working hard, but I really just felt like a 14-year-old girl without a care in the world and I haven't felt like that in a really long time."

A portion of the proceeds from each trek goes to support the local communities. Source: Supplied

Dundovic, who has a personal connection to Kokoda, with her grandfather Sir Thomas Blamey, the Commander and Chief of Australian forces in the Kokoda campaign, said the trek was the best experience of her life.

"I get goosebumps when I talk about it," the 27-year-old told news.com.au.

Over six gruelling days, the pair walked through the jungle of Papua New Guinea, tracing the footsteps of Aussie soldiers who fought in perhaps the most significant battle fought by Australians in World War II.

625 Australians were killed and over 1000 were wounded in the 1942 campaign against Japanese invasion of PNG.

"Walking in the footsteps of those soldiers, it's almost like they're with you the entire way, every time you're having a weak moment," said Holland. "I fell over and knocked my knee pretty bad and thought, 'I can't do this, I can't do this', and then I thought, 'You know what? I'm fed, I'm watered, I have someone the majority of my weight, I can do this'. It really motivates you in those times that it's particularly hard to get going."

Dundovic said the experience was a particularly emotional one and it suprised her how much it affected her.

"At school you hear the names of people involved in the war and it's sad that it's just a name, but when you're over there and you hear the story of what they went through and then you see their tombstone at the end with their name on it, it just becomes so, so real. For me, when you hear the ages of the men who were fighting, I thought 'I've got younger brothers like that.'"

The pair said they found the journey very emotional. Source: Supplied

The pair said they were moved by seeing old weaponry, boots, water bottles and helmets still just laying out there on the track.
"They're not in a museum or anything, but I guess the whole trail is a museum because there is stuff everywhere for you to see," said Holland. "It's a constant reminder of what happened. I think this is the only way that you can begin to understand the magnitude of the sacrifice that they made, it makes me tear up even trying to sum it up."

The pair completed the walk as part of a campaign to encourage more women to #DoKokoda.

"People think it's for fit young male athletes and it's not," said Holland. "I don't think there's any difference between a man or woman doing it. It's just one foot in front of the other. We saw a group of guys on the track and they kind of looked at us, saw our blonde hair and laughed and we ended up beating them by a day."

The girls with their local tour guides and cameraman. Source: Supplied

Guided by Papua New Guinean locals, some of whom were the descendants of the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels who were widely credited with helping the Australians to win the battle, the pair say they left with an immense sense of gratitude and appreciation.

"I didn't realise what a pivotal moment this entire campaign was in Australian history," said Holland. "Our lives could be so different right now if it wasn't for what happened and I had no idea, I'm not going to lie, I did ancient history at school, I had no idea about our own history so I feel really blessed now to have had that experience and to really appreciate what happened."

From high heels to hiking boots. Source: Supplied

Laura and Erin's expert tips for surviving for the track:

• Talcum powder is great for drying out your feet.

• Don't get a pedicure just before you go: "Having soft feet is bad, you need to spend a few weeks toughening them up," advised Laura.

• Take a pillow, "I really wish I had one to get a good night's sleep."

• The less you take the better, its too hard sorting through the bag

• Take body wash over a bar of soap, "I lost the bar of soap in the river on the first night," said Laura

• Snacks are really good bribery for getting you up the hills, "I kept thinking if I get up the top I get a jelly bean, this is exciting," said Erin.

• "There's no mirrors, so you won't know what you look like until you get home," said Laura who also recently competed on I'm A Celebrity ... Get Me Out Of Here.

• Prioritise hill training and endurance, clock up at least ten kilometres a day

• "Wear in your boots in the number one thing"

• Tiger balm is good to rub into your muscles before you sleep and make sure you stretch

For more information visit DoKokoda.com.

Erin Holland with some local Papua New Guinean children. Source: Supplied


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‘A giant step backwards for human rights’

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 09 April 2015 | 04.29

Malaysia is a huge holiday destination for Aussies but its human rights record is questionable. Source: News Limited

IT is an island paradise frequented by Aussie tourists every year. It boasts stunning beaches and a bustling cosmopolitan city the envy of its Asian neighbours.

But this home away from home on our doorstep — less than 4000km away — is fast becoming a "human rights black hole".

The colourful description courtesy of Amnesty International refers to Malaysia, where the government this week introduced a law affording police wide-ranging powers to detain individuals without trial for an indefinite period of time.

The Prevention of Terrorism Act, approved 79 votes to 60 in Malaysia's parliament on Tuesday, was sold as a measure necessary to strengthen the country's protections against Islamic militants.

But critics say it's a giant step backwards for a country where public canings are commonplace and where peaceful marches are viewed as a direct insult to Prime Minister Najib Razak's authority.

The Petronas Twin Towers in Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur. Source: News Limited

HUMAN RIGHTS CONCERNS NOTHING NEW FOR MALAYSIA

Malaysia runs its own show. It does so despite numerous calls to improve its human rights record.

Among concerns highlighted in recent years are the government's tight control over freedom of speech, freedom of expression and freedom of religion. There are two direct controls enshrined in Malaysian law — the Sedition Act and the Printing Press and Publications Act — that forbid democratic protests or material critical of the government.

Corporal punishment still takes place in Malaysia, too, where judicial caning is common following a criminal sentence. Amnesty International released a report in 2010 highlighting the long term impact, both physically and psychologically, of caning.

The Blow to Humanity report declared "caning in Malaysia has hit epidemic proportions" and suggested thousands of people each year were subjected to torture and ill-treatment.

Equally concerning is Malaysia's stance on sexuality. According to the New York-based Human Rights Watch, "open opposition to LGBT rights has increased as courts are more assertively prosecuting alleged LGBT activity".

Still, Australians continue to visit. In fact, more than 300,000 Aussies jumped on a plane bound for Malaysia between 2013 and 2014. That figure is up 247.9 per cent from a decade ago, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics figures.

Video still of an asylum-seeker detainee being beaten by a rattan cane while in detention centre in Malaysia. Picture: Amnesty International. Source: Supplied

NEW LAW 'LIKE AIMLESSLY STABBING IN THE DARK'

The Prevention of Terrorism Act passed in the early hours of the morning on Tuesday by a small margin.

The government said the measure was needed to turn the tide on a growing number of Malaysian citizens linked to Islamic State.

"This is a real threat, and prevention measures are needed," Malaysian Home Minister Zahid Hamidi said.

But critics have been quick to declare it a poor decision. Human Rights Watch called it a "giant step backwards for human rights" and the reopening of "Pandora's box for politically motivated, abusive state actions".

Amnesty International's Malaysia-based researcher Hazel Galang-Folli said the decision was "a shocking onslaught against human rights and the rule of law".

"Abandoning people to rot in a cell for years on end without a judicial process and proof that they have committed a crime is just like aimlessly stabbing in the dark. Authorities must ensure that human rights and fair trial guarantees are respected and protected," he said.

"With the stroke of a pen, Malaysia has managed to get one step closer to becoming a 'human rights black hole' where fundamental rights to a fair trial or freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, even if enshrined in the Malaysian constitution, are increasingly being undermined in the name of national security."


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Missing Coogee mum found

Missing Sydney woman Jessica Bialek has returned home after going missing on Wednesday.

AFTER nearly 36 hours of worry, the husband of Jessica Bialek has told the world of his relief that his wife is alive and well and back at home.

"Jessica Bialke is safe at home. Found. Thank You," Sabino Matera posted on facebook early this evening.

Ms Bialke, a freelance photographer, 38, had been missing since yesterday morning.

Jessica Bialek, 37, was last seen in Coogee on Wednesday. Picture: Facebook. Source: Facebook

She vanished after leaving her luxurious Coogee home at about 8:30am. Police were alerted late that same day.

Mr Matera had remained at the family home with the couple's two-year-old daughter.

He made a desperate appeal for help to find her on Facebook on Wednesday night.

Jessica's brother Dean (left) and father Michael are appealing for anyone with information to come forward. Picture: Toby Zerna Source: News Corp Australia

Supt Gavin Dengate with Jessica's father Michael as they address the media. Picture: Toby Zerna Source: News Corp Australia

"Jessica has gone missing. I spoke to her this morning at 8.30am and she has been out of reach since then," he posted.

"We are very concerned about Jessica. Please help me find her! She left home without her car and has not made contact nor returned home.

"Her phone is off. This is a real alarm."

Jessica Bialek's husband Sabino Matera has called for help on Facebook to find his missing wife. Picture: Facebook. Source: Facebook

Jessica's family have made up this flyer to place around the Coogee area. Picture: Facebook Source: Facebook

Jessica's family made a public plea for help on Thursday afternoon. Source: Facebook

Mr Matera said his wife had left home without her car and had not made any contact with him or their young daughter since. He had been unable to reach her by phone.

He wrote she left to walk to the bank at 8.45am.

Family and friends mounted a search to find Ms Bialek, who is an accomplished performing arts photographer who has worked for the Australian Ballet and Opera Victoria.

Earlier today her father Michael Bialek described his daughter as a happy but "complex" young woman during an emotional public appeal for information.

"Generally she's quite a complex character, but she's a loving mother, a wonderful sister and a wonderful daughter," Mr Bialek said.

"All of those things make us very suspicious about what it is that's made her go missing."

A teary Mr Bialek — accompanied by his son Dean and detective superintendent Gavin Dengate — said a large number of Jessica's friends had been posting flyers around Sydney in the hope of gleaning information.


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Most dangerous movie you’ve never heard of

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 08 April 2015 | 04.29

'Suicide mission' ... This famous Hollywood clan were labelled 'brainsick' for eating, sleeping and working with unpredictable, fully-grown lions. Picture: Drafthouse Films Source: Supplied

IT was called a "suicide mission" and "the most disaster-plagued film in the history of Hollywood."

Now a whole new audience is about to be exposed to a forgotten classic that just may be the most dangerous movie ever made - thanks in part to its incredible backstory.

Directed and starring Noel Marshall (you might know him from The Exorcist), Roar is being re-released in cinemas and on DVD, 34 years after flopping at the box office and derailing Marshall's directorial career.

According to a blog post by Drafthouse Films CEO and founder Tim League, the movie "follows wildlife preservationist Hank (Marshall), who lives harmoniously alongside a menagerie of untamed animals, including cheetahs, elephants, lions and tigers on a preservation in the African plains.

"When his wife and children arrive for a visit, a long-brewing battle for dominance between two lions erupts and threatens their very lives."

But what audiences didn't see was the behind-the-scenes drama that cursed the movie and its producers for years to come.

Cast and crew were attacked and mauled by lions 70 times. Some of the worst injuries included upcoming European cinematographer Jan de Bont (Speed) having his scalp torn off and child star Melanie Griffith needing reconstructive surgery during filming.

Scalp torn off ... Jan de Bont received 220 stitches to the back of his head after being scalped by a lion. Picture: Drafthouse Films Source: Supplied

HOW IT ALL BEGAN: 'A SUICIDE MISSION'

After shooting a film in Africa, American actress Tippi Hedren and her manager husband Noel Marshall were inspired by the idea of a movie that highlighted the plight of animal cruelty of big cats in captivity. According to Mr League, the couple were struck by the scene of an abandoned house which was overrun by lions. That image took hold, and they "became devoted to raising awareness about the over-hunting of wild lions, tigers and jaguars".

But their big idea was shot down by animal trainers, who dubbed the idea a "suicide mission", "brainsick" and "completely and utterly insane."

It would take 11-years to complete the film.

No biggie ... Just hanging with a few hungry lions, as you do. Picture: Drafthouse Films Source: Supplied

SLEEPING WITH A PRIDE OF LIONS

Knowing the cats would only work together unless they were raised together, Hedren and Marshall set up a lion breeding program in their Los Angeles mansion.

For six years, the couple, along with their young actor-daughter Melanie Griffith and Marshall's three sons, built a pride of cats that numbered more than 100 and went about their daily lives eating, sleeping, eating ... living, with the pride of lions within their own home.

As the pride grew, the confines of a Beverly Hills mansion became too much for the cats, and the family moved to a ranch 64km north of Los Angeles.

"What followed was five years of the most terrifying and dangerous filmmaking ever committed to celluloid," said Mr League.

Terrifying ... That's not a special effect, that's the real deal. Picture: Drafthouse Films Source: Supplied

LIONS SCALP, MAUL AND ALMOST KILL CREW

70 attacks were documented during production's eleven years of filming.

The cast consisted mostly of Marshall, Hedren and the four children due to their relationship with the cats, but that didn't stop the blood from spilling.

Cinematographer de Bont was scalped by a lion, resulting in 220 stitches to his head.

Griffith was mauled and needed reconstructive surgery and 100 stitches.

Hedren suffered "deep scalp wounds" and a fractured leg while Marshall was "gored" so often he eventually contracted gangrene.

If that wasn't dangerous enough, a flood wiped out the entire set and a feline-related illness decimated their lion pride.

The fear in their eyes was real ... Tippi Hedren in a scene from the film as a fellow cast member is wrestled by a fully-grown lion. Picture: Drafthouse Films Source: Supplied

PRODUCTION SPIRALS OUT OF CONTROL

After two years of attacks and near-misses, financiers pulled out of production, leaving Hedren and Marshall to fit the bill. Refusing to give up, the couple sold almost all their assets to personally finance the rest of the production.

"Refusing to yield to the intense adversity, de Bont, Hedren, Marshall and their family continued to heal wounds, rebuild sets, and hire crew after crew to wrap the production," said Mr League.

What's wrong with this picture? ... The film was a box office disaster. Picture: Drafthouse Films Source: Supplied

DEBUT DISASTER AT THE BOX OFFICE

After forking out an estimated $17 million in production costs, the movie grossed a disappointing $2 million when it debuted in cinemas in 1981.

But, according to Mr League, "the passage of time affords us the perspective to view Roar for what it truly is: the most epic and amazing animal thriller ever made".

"The cast is in constant mortal danger as dozens of adult lions "improvise" around them.

"At numerous times Marshall drips blood as he fends off ferocious advances from jaguars and tigers alike.

"Melanie Griffith's real-life mauling is on display in the final cut. A jaguar licking honey off Tippi Hedren's face was an untested idea that could have easily ended very, very badly.

"Knowing the backstory of the production, you can see perpetual terror in the eyes of the cast as an army of lethal predators close in around them."

Roar will be re-released this year in US cinemas, and will be available on Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand platforms later this winter.


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Plane stowaway found ALIVE with bleeding ear

Mario Steven Ambarita. Picture: Facebook Source: Facebook

AN Indonesian man has hitched a high-stakes ride to the country's capital by clinging to the landing gear of a commercial plane.

21-year-old Mario Steven Ambarita sneaked onto the tarmac at an airport in Sumatra on Tuesday before clambering aboard the Boeing jet's landing gear, air transport ministry director general Suprasetyo said.

The stowaway then sat there for the hour-long flight to the international airport just outside Jakarta, where he was discovered upon landing.

"He really put his safety in danger as the plane flew as high as 34,000 feet, where the oxygen is very thin and temperatures are below zero degrees Celsius," Suprasetyo said.

Ambarita admitted to authorities he'd been planning the daring adventure for a year, staking out the airport in advance.

Local reports suggested the man was desperate to visit his birthplace Jakarta.

Suprasetyo said the unexpected passenger still managed to walk when the plane landed, but was staggering and had a bleeding ear.

"But his condition is now fine," Suprasetyo said.

The man is still being questioned, and could face a one-year jail term if charged with putting the Garuda flight in danger.


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Mad Missile now hunting McEvoy

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 07 April 2015 | 04.30

Cameron McEvoy took out the men's 100m freestyle final, beating James Magnussen, foreground, to the wall. Picture: Brett Costello Source: News Corp Australia

JAMES Magnussen is pissed off, giant killer Cameron McEvoy is now the hunted and 16-year-old wunderkind Kyle Chalmers is the new hunter.

Welcome to the new world order of Australian sprinting.

McEvoy extended his recent dominance over the two-times world champion Magnussen by gunning down the sprint king in the final strokes of the 100m freestyle on Wednesday night.

It is the third time in their last four bouts that McEvoy has delivered the knockout blow, but interestingly it was the first time the younger 200m specialist had done so by coming from behind.

McEvoy hit the wall in 48.06s to just overhaul Magnussen who had led by 0.19s at the turn but finished in a disappointing 48.18s ahead of Tommaso D'Orsogna (48.54s) and 16-year-old rookie Chalmers (48.69s).

Cameron McEvoy celebrates his victory in swimming's blue riband event. Source: Getty Images

"This is definitely a new feeling. I've been the underdog in the past so it's a new feeling to be the hunted," McEvoy said.

"That time is still 0.4s off the top three or four last year. I take this meet as a stepping stone to the world championships.

"I'm still really happy with the win. I do take pride in always trying to be consistent when I step up to competitions and so far I've been able to do that.

"It's something me and my coach really work on and make my No. 1 priority."

This was the first major test of Magnussen's bold coaching switch last year and he is now searching for answers why he faded so poorly in the final 15m.

Magnussen will retain faith in his new coaches Mitch and Lach Falvey, believing he can swim his best times at the worlds rather than the first half of the year.

"That's pretty disappointing. I shouldn't be swimming 48s," Magnussen said.

"I'm really happy with the way I swam it I just died in the end.

"(Losing and the time) both equally pissed me off. Losing is probably worse.

"There is no need to be really fast at this time of the year. I just have to peak at the right time."

The big shock was 16-year-old Chalmers who became the fastest 16-year-old in world history and is actually a full second faster than McEvoy was at the same age four years ago.

Incredibly Chalmers felt he could've hauled in the two top dogs of world swimming with an extra 10m and is clearly a man to watch on the road to Rio.

"He said 'oh if only I had 10m more'," Chalmers' coach Shelly Jarrett said.

A dejected James Magnussen after finishing second in the men's 100m freestyle final. Picture: Brett Costello Source: News Corp Australia

"He is a pretty talented youngster and one of his qualities is he is great racer and able to raise the bar.

"We knew he was capable of something pretty awesome and breaking the 49 was pretty amazing for us. He was very happy."

Maddie Groves stamped herself as a genuine gold medal threat in the 200m butterfly winning in 2:05.41 from Brianna Throssell (2:07.29) in a time that is the second fastest in the world in the last 12 months.

Groves, 19, moved ahead of Susie O'Neill on the Australian all-time top 10 to second place and shapes as a bona-fide contender between now and Rio Olympics.

Bronte Campbell set the stage for an epic 100m freestyle final showdown with world champion sister Cate (53.08s) by qualifying fastest in 53.05s in the semi-finals.

Cate might not have been reserving as much in her tank as she has in the past, but is ready for the clash with her sister on Wednesday.

Kyle Chalmers, right, after qualifying for the world titles. Picture: Brett Costello. Source: News Corp Australia

"I tend to be that swimmer that doesn't look like she is trying but is actually dying on the inside," Cate said.

"I did what I needed to do, it put me through in a good lane and I think this time I will be breathing towards Bronte and be able to keep a little bit more of an eye on her on the way home."

Commonwealth champion Daniel Tranter proved his move to the US to train with Michael Phelps will soon pay dividends, defending his 200m medley title in 1:58.73 from Mackay's Justin James (1:58.86) and Tom Fraser-Holmes (1:59.55).

The time came off just three months training for Tranter who almost quit the sport late last year, but his world titles fate will rest in the hands of Australian team selectors after he fell short of the automatic qualifying time for Kazan.

In last night's other final Emily Seebohm continued her hot form breaking the 50m backstroke Commonwealth record in 27.47s.

Originally published as Mad Missile now hunting McEvoy
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First picture: Penny Wong’s new baby girl

Senator Penny Wong and her partner Sophie Allouache. Source: News Limited

LABOR Senate leader Penny Wong and her family spent the Easter long weekend enjoying a new addition to their family — a baby girl.

Senator Wong's partner Sophie Allouache gave birth to Hannah in Adelaide at the Women's and Children's Hospital on Good Friday.

The couple already have a three-year-old daughter, Alexandra.

"Sophie and Hannah are well, and Alexandra is thrilled with the new addition to our family,'' Senator Wong said in a statement.

"We ask that our family's privacy is respected at this special time in our lives.''

South Australian Labor is in the midst of a baby boom.

Kingston MP Amanda Rishworth gave birth to a baby boy last month.

Member for Adelaide Kate Ellis is due to give birth to her first child this month.

Originally published as First picture: Penny Wong's new baby girl

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Man in drag robs Melbourne service station

Written By Unknown on Senin, 06 April 2015 | 04.29

A man wearing red lipstick, a blonde wig and skirt has robbed a service station with a homemade gun.

Police are hunting a service station robber who disguised himself as a woman. Source: Supplied

TALK about unladylike behaviour.

Police in Melbourne are hunting a robber who walked into a service station in the suburb of Watervale and threatened a female worker with a gun.

At first glance the robber appeared to be a woman — but was actually a man disguised in a skirt, curly blonde wig, sunglasses and a sun hat.

Do you know this man? Source: Supplied

CCTV captured his movements inside the service station. Source: Supplied

Police said he entered the service station on Taylors Road just before 7.30pm last Monday and calmly went to a drink fridge before going to the counter where he confronted the staff member.

Once at the counter, he waved what appeared to be a homemade machine gun from a black bag and demanded money.

The staff member handed over a quantity of cash which he put in the bag — along with the fake gun — and quickly left the store.

There were customers in the store at the time but neither they or the worker were injured.

+ Anyone who recognises the man in the security vision is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.


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The man who almost killed Hitler

Adolf Hitler was almost killed in 1939. Source: AP

IN November of 1939, mere months after the start of World War II, Adolf Hitler was almost assassinated.

The would-be killer, a 36-year-old German carpenter named Johann Georg Elser, was acting alone against impossible odds. He failed, Hitler survived, and for six more years, the world was ravaged by unprecedented bloodshed.

By the time Hitler shot himself in 1945, Elser's plot had largely been forgotten, but now we know precisely how close he came to killing the Fuhrer. The daring plot missed its target by just 13 minutes.

The carpenter turned would-be assassin, Johann Georg Elser. Source: Supplied

Elser hatched his scheme in the autumn of 1938, having decided war was "unavoidable" with Hitler in control of Germany. Obviously, he was right about that. Elser planned to kill the Fuhrer with a bomb during his annual speech at the Burgerbraukeller, a beer hall in Munich.

"I slowly concocted in my mind that it was best to pack explosives in the pillar directly behind the speaker's podium," he told the Gestapo later.

His reasoning was sound enough. Every year, at exactly the same time on November 8, Hitler would speak at an event commemorating the Nazi party's early history. Elser knew where his target would be, and when he would be there.

Hitler was a passionate, if disturbing, speaker. Source: NewsComAu

Elser stole explosives from his workplace, an armament factory, before taking detonators and cartridges from a quarry. When he'd gathered the materials he would need, Elser travelled to Munich and set about hiding his bomb in the beer hall.

For more than 30 nights, he entered the hall before it closed at 10:30pm, secretly remaining inside. With the building empty and its doors locked, he created a cavity in the column, carefully avoiding attention by conducting his loudest work when the hall's toilets flushed automatically.

At the start of November, Elser placed his bomb inside the column. He conducted a final check the night before Hitler was due to speak, activated the timer, then left the city.

The bomb was supposed to explode while Hitler was speaking. Source: AFP

Everything was in place, but an unforeseeable problem foiled Elser's plan. Heavy fog closed Munich's airport on November 8, meaning Hitler would need to catch a train back to Berlin, where he was to consult with his military advisers. That changed his schedule.

The Fuhrer started speaking at 8pm, half an hour earlier than expected, and left the hall at 9:07. Elser's bomb exploded at 9:20, killing eight people and injuring 60 more, but his target was already en route to the train station. He'd missed by 13 minutes.

Elser came agonisingly close to pulling it off. Source: Supplied

Elser was arrested trying to cross the border into Switzerland. According to the Spiegel, he was carrying incriminating evidence — notes on how to make explosives and a postcard of the beer hall, among other things. His knees were scraped from his work on the column, and waitresses later identified him as a frequent visitor at the hall. Eventually, Elser had to confess.

He was taken to Berlin and tortured by the Gestapo, who initially didn't believe he'd acted alone. When the authorities were done, they sent him to a concentration camp in Dachau, where he was executed in 1945. The war ended a few months later.

How different would the war have been if Hitler had not survived? Source: AP

Transcripts from the Gestapo's interrogations of Elser survived and were released in the 1960s. They now form the basis of what we know about his attempt to kill Hitler. A film telling his story, 13 Minutes, was released in Germany this year.

If Elser had succeeded, World War II undoubtedly would have transpired differently. The Holocaust may not have happened, for a start, and it's likely that millions more lives would have been saved across Europe.

In other words, those 13 minutes were probably the costliest in human history.


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