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SBS Australia
an hour ago
- SBS Australia
호주 뉴스 3분 브리핑: 2025년 8월 7일 목요일
Independent news and stories connecting you to life in Australia and Korean-speaking Australians. Ease into the English language and Australian culture. We make learning English convenient, fun and practical.

ABC News
3 hours ago
- ABC News
Young endangered cassowary dies after ingesting fish hook
A juvenile cassowary has died in Far North Queensland after it ingested a fish hook, prompting fresh calls for tourists and locals to avoid feeding the birds or leaving fishing debris. Innisfail wildlife ranger Stephen Clough said he had been monitoring an adult male bird and his three chicks in the Coquette Point area on the Cassowary Coast, about 90 kilometres south of Cairns. He said he had observed the critically endangered birds approaching people for food for several weeks. "They were displaying behaviour which was consistent with behaviour we see when birds have been fed," Mr Clough said. The Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation (DETSI) received a report on July 27 that one of the juveniles had "a length of fishing line dangling from its beak". "[The bird] was struggling and stepping on and tripping up on it and seemed to be in a little bit of pain," Mr Clough said. Rangers searched for and captured the bird, sedated it and took it to Tully veterinarian Graham Lauridsen for assessment. Mr Clough said the incident was "a sad reminder" for people to be more conscious of not feeding birds and to properly dispose of fishing materials. Listed as endangered, the southern cassowary's greatest threats are habitat loss, traffic and domestic dog attacks. While wildlife carers in the area regularly attended to sea birds and turtles swallowing fish hooks and lures, Mr Clough said it was less common for cassowaries. The DETSI said people should remove bait from hooks after a fishing session and discard any unwanted fishing tackle properly into a bin. Dr Lauridsen said it was the third cassowary found with a fishing hook lodged in its throat in the last year, with another at Etty Bay and another "further south". But unlike this latest chick, the last two survived. "Once we started and got an X-ray, the hook was well and truly stuck right down in its abdomen," Dr Lauridsen said. Dr Lauridsen said the hook had done too much internal damage and was in "such a precarious spot" that it could not be retrieved, and the bird died while sedated. He said it was important for the public to understand the risks of leaving fishing lines and rubbish around. "We're not just sort of polluting or leaving our litter around," he said. "It can create a very significant drama for, in this case, an endangered cassowary."

ABC News
5 hours ago
- ABC News
Plans for new Richmond River High Campus after fire, floods destroy historic building
For Leo Logan, it is the small things that make Richmond River High's historic North Lismore campus special. This is where his brother, sister and mother were once students, and his grandfather worked as a teacher. "Seeing all the old stuff — desks with people's names scribbled on them from 30 years ago — it was really cool," he said. But Leo spent just two weeks at the northern New South Wales school before it was destroyed by floods in 2022. He spent the next three years learning in cramped demountable classrooms. Now in year 10, the 15-year-old said he was disappointed he did not get the chance to make memories at the school. "It was quite emotional," he said. The Department of Education deemed the North Lismore campus of The Rivers Secondary College "unsalvageable". The 2022 flood caused widespread damage, and a fire in March this year destroyed much of the historic timber structure. Plans have been released for a new school that will sit above the Probable Maximum Flood height, within five minutes' drive of the old site. It will include more than 50 classrooms, performance spaces, and facilities for sport, agriculture, construction, and food technologies. The NSW Reconstruction Authority will fast-track planning approvals for the new campus, which is expected to be open for term 1, 2027. To meet the deadline, modular buildings will be manufactured offsite while civil infrastructure works are carried out onsite. So far, 16 of the 21 flood-damaged schools in the region have been repaired or rebuilt, with flood resilience at the forefront of planning. Repairs to schools at Tumbulgum and Condong in the Tweed Shire are underway, while work is in the pipeline to complete public schools at Murwillumbah East, South Lismore, and Cabbage Tree Island. Principal Luke Woodward said while he would miss the "beautiful" old school building, it was not what made Richmond River High special. "Our drawing area is vastly different from a lot of high schools that come from a particular suburb or a particular area — our kids live in communities, [they're] small village kids, farming kids," he said. "We have a really eclectic, diverse range of students and staff. Leo's mum, Megan Bennett, studied at the school and is now the P&C president. Ms Bennett said the new design reflected the school's identity and embodied the spirit of inclusivity. She said elements such as the yarning and dancing circles acknowledged the Aboriginal heritage of the land where the new school would sit. Leo's grandfather Ed Bennett fondly remembered the time he spent teaching at the school. "It was like a big family, and that was really important to us." Mr Bennett estimated that over 65 years, more than 15,000 students passed through the old school. His grandson Leo said students at the new school would still have a sense of being part of something historic. "Everyone who went there will know just how important the other site was, and they will make the new site just as important and loved by everyone," he said.