Nauru prisoners suffering from even more medical issues

Currently, more than half of the refugee children held on Nauru have been flagged for urgent medical attention, according to Refugee advocates.

The holding area for refugees has seen a recent spike in medical admissions, which has been linked to the expulsion of Medecins Sans Frontiere’s (or Doctors Without Borders) from the island.

At the moment, there are around 50 children on the ‘open air prison’ with 1 in four of them being acutely suicidal.

Greyhounds Losing Out

Just two years after trying to ban greyhound racing, the New South Wales racing industry is expected to receive an extra $32 million dollars over the next four years.

This comes with new point of consumption tax laws, and means the greyhound racing industry will be receiving an excess of $70 million dollars from the government.

SW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet defended the changes, saying online betting industries weren’t paying their fair share of tax.

Bees Losing Their Buzz

Hundreds of bees have been found dead in South Australia’s Mid North, but the reason why remains a mystery.

 

Peterborough local, Jason O’Connel, has never seen anything like it; he says you might sit out in the yard and see a dozen or two bees, instead of the regular 200.

 

Locals are concerned the bees may have been poisoned from weed killer being sprayed by a council worker, but Mayor Ruth Whittle says the council had not sprayed any weeds or beehives.

 

Brisbane Startup Boom

There is a Brisbane startup hub that has increased its capacity by almost 60% to meet the demands of Queensland’s startup community.

Brisbane’s first CBD startup space The Capital was opened in 2016, and it’s where some of the state’s leading entrepreneurs come up with their ideas.

There are currently around 160 members of the hub, and a further 35 on the waitlist, and even as they expand the space with 95 more new positions, The Capital expects to be at capacity again by the end of the year.

Risk Takers Charged

In QLD, more than 250 people a year are being charged over dangerous stunts posted to social media.

More than 1,300 people have been charged in the past 5 years for acts considered “unregulated high-risk activities” like base jumping and hanging off the edge of high rise buildings.

Officials say these crimes just didn’t exist before social media became a platform on which people could post their boastful, deadly stunts.

Terror Attack in the USA

USA Authorities are working hard after an “act of terror” occurred in the country, when near identical pipe bombs were mailed to several prominent left wing figures, showing the already bitter divide between the left and right before the upcoming midterm elections.

 

The bombs were addressed to former first lady Hillary Clinton, former president Barack Obama, former Attorney-General Eric Holder, liberal donor George Soros, New York Mayor Andrew Cuomo and Democratic Congresswomen Deborah Wasserman Schultz and Maxine Waters.

 

Renewable Energy Sources Winning

Australian companies who are aiming for 100% renewable energy, wanting to join the likes of Apple and Google, are set to meet at a forum in Sydney.

 

The RE100 initiative brings together more than 150 member companies who are aiming for 100% renewable energy usage, with a total investment pool of more than $100 billion dollars.

 

Companies like IKEA, Apple and H&M will be presenting their renewable successes at the forum, from IKEA owning more wind power plants than stores, to Mars Australia using solar power.

Gay Students Still Waiting

The proposed new laws protecting gay students at religious schools have already been delayed by at least a month.

 

Prime minister Scott Morrison said earlier in the month that he wanted to make sure gay students couldn’t be discriminated against at school.

 

Talk is continuing, and the proposed bill will hopefully be put to parliament when the House of Representatives next sits in late November.