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SA Police launches Commissioner's Inquiry into Royston Park arrest incident
SA Police launches Commissioner's Inquiry into Royston Park arrest incident

ABC News

time24 minutes ago

  • ABC News

SA Police launches Commissioner's Inquiry into Royston Park arrest incident

SA Police has launched a Commissioner's Inquiry after a man became unresponsive while being arrested last week in Adelaide's east. SA Police Commissioner Grant Stevens told ABC Radio Adelaide the inquiry would be conducted "on top of" an investigation by Major Crime and the internal investigation section detectives currently underway into the incident on Payneham Road at Royston Park in the early hours of May 29. The 42-year-old Modbury Park man remains in a critical condition in hospital. Commissioner Stevens said the inquiry would look at SAPOL's "policies, practices, procedures including our training in relation to responding to these types of incidents to make sure there are no opportunities for any other improvements or any failures in those elements". "It is significant, we don't call many commissioner's inquiries and that is where we have a major incident involving police activity and there's a need to be able to demonstrate that the actions of the police officers involved were appropriate in the circumstances and if not what were the factors that we need to address to make sure similar things don't occur again," he said. "Wherever there is a death in custody, it's virtually automatic that there's a Commissioner's Inquiry. "Given the significant injury this man has suffered as a result of his interaction with police, it is my assessment that we should be doing that level of inquiry." "People need to have confidence in us that we do out job as professionally and effectively as we can — that's the reason we're calling it [the inquiry]." Commissioner Stevens said he has viewed part of the body worn camera vision and the initial assessment was the officers involved "were acting in accordance with their training". He said eight officers responded to the incident and their body worn cameras were recording. He added all involved officers remain on active duty. When asked if the officers would be stood down during the inquiry, Commissioner Stevens said, "If there's anything throughout the process that indicates that that should occur, we change their duties, we don't stand them down so that we can manage that inquiry effectively". He said a Chief Superintendent had been allocated as the inquiry's senior investigating officer. In a statement last week, police allege the man "was assaulting a female" when they intervened. "While being restrained the man violently resisted police," SA Police alleged. "After being restrained he became unresponsive and police administered first aid until SAAS (SA Ambulance Service) arrived." The man's partner spoke with other media outlets about the incident. ABC has attempted to reach out to her.

‘Inhumane': North Melbourne public housing residents protest ahead of demolition
‘Inhumane': North Melbourne public housing residents protest ahead of demolition

News.com.au

time36 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

‘Inhumane': North Melbourne public housing residents protest ahead of demolition

Selling off public housing is inhumane and tells war-fleeing refugees that Australia does not want them, a Melbourne housing advocate says. For a second day on Tuesday, residents and supporters tried to stop workers entering the public housing tower on Alfred St, North Melbourne. The public housing towers are slated for demolition, to be replaced with charity-owned community housing and 'affordable' apartments. Notable Melbourne housing advocate Jordan van den Lamb told NewsWire the process for getting residents out of Alfred St had been inhumane. The replacement public houses were too small for families, and the relocations on offer were away from residents' existing support networks, he said. On Tuesday, dozens of residents and supporters protested outside the housing towers, Mr van den Lamb said. 'They're not building any three-bedroom homes. This stuff is like 'we're going to demolish a three-bedroom home and replace it with three one-bedroom apartments. 'What message does that tell to someone who's got a large family and is fleeing war? … 'We don't care about you. We don't want you to live in public housing'.' Residents were unwilling to speak to NewsWire for fear of jeopardising their applications for a new home. The apartments at the new, redeveloped Alfred St site will be leased to the private sector for 40 years. Housing Minister Harriet Shing has criticised Greens politicians – who were at the protest on Monday – for spreading fear. 'No demolition works are scheduled while people are living in the towers,' she said in a statement to NewsWire. 'While we're getting on with delivering modern and accessible homes for people on the social housing register, the Greens continue to spend their time spreading misinformation and creating fear without offering actual solutions.' A notice issued on Friday informed residents that workers in high-vis and hazmat suits would be arriving during the week to 'carry out concrete investigations in empty apartments'. Four towers at the nearby Flemington Estate are also set to be demolished. Some residents of Flemington Estate and Alfred St towers have already left their homes, relocated to other public houses. A chorus of remaining residents want all relocations to be sorted before any preliminary works are done on the buildings. 'Commencing works while residents remain in their homes is premature, inappropriate, and deeply disrespectful,' a joint letter from tenants to Homes Victoria says. 'We are still living in this building. Regardless of how many residents remain, this is our home, not a construction site. 'The presence of workers in hazmat suits, disruptive noise, restricted access and diminished privacy in the name of redevelopment planning sends a clear message that the wellbeing and dignity of the remaining residents are being ignored.' Days before retiring from politics, then Premier Dan Andrews announced Melbourne's 44 public housing towers would be knocked down and redeveloped. The residents – numbering somewhere between 10,000 and 13,000 – were not informed before Mr Andrews donned high-vis and made the announcement to the media. The plan is part of a massive 'urban renewal' push. The project has a deadline of 2051 and promises by the end the state will have 10 per cent more social houses. Social housing is an umbrella term for public housing and community housing. Public housing is state-owned and community houses are owned by not-for-profit organisations. The redevelopment scheme also includes 'affordable housing' – units capped at 90 per cent of market rent.

Elusive oarfish found at Ocean Beach on Tasmania's rugged west coast
Elusive oarfish found at Ocean Beach on Tasmania's rugged west coast

ABC News

time43 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Elusive oarfish found at Ocean Beach on Tasmania's rugged west coast

When Sybil Robertson went dog walking on Tasmania's Ocean Beach on Monday, she was unaware she was about to join the small club of people who have found an elusive oarfish. The creature from the deep is the longest bony fish species in the world and is rarely seen by humans. Known by some as the "doomsday fish", it is linked to tales of sea serpents and natural disasters. "I was watching a sea eagle flying around and I noticed it was coming down onto the beach and I thought, 'That's unusual, I don't often see them land on the beach,'" Ms Robertson said. The Strahan resident could see the sun catching a silvery streak on the beach, on state's rugged west coast. "I could see it was a long fish but I had no idea what kind of fish," Ms Robertson said. "As I got closer I could see the beautiful colouring around its heads and the markings on it were fabulous." She said it was a "good three paces" in length and had some injuries, but otherwise appeared in good condition. Ms Robertson took photos of the fish and posted them to a social media group called Citizen Scientists of Tasmania, where it was confirmed as an oarfish. In a race against time due to hungry birds circling, authorities were contacted to take samples of the fish so it could be researched by CSIRO experts. Ocean Beach is known for its wildness, and at its longitude there is no land between it and South America. "It's a good place to be." Neville Barrett, a fish biologist and associate professor with the University of Tasmania's Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, described the oarfish Ms Robertson found as a "beauty". "It's a very rare occasion when one washes ashore," he said. "There's not many reportings at all." Dr Barrett said the fish could grow up to 8 metres, and lived in the open ocean at depths from 150m to 1 kilometre below the surface. He said very few people had seen one alive. "It's very much a fortuitous, lucky thing really," Dr Barrett said. "It's not the kind of thing that would be caught in trawlers and it's not somewhere we go diving — we're not catching them." He said most sank when they died, and decomposed. "Occasionally when they are sick, apparently, they swim up to the surface for unknown reasons," Dr Barrett said. "There's a lot of them out there in the ocean almost certainly, but they live and die well out of sight of the average human. There were two species of oarfish found in Australia, according to CSIRO ichthyologist John Pogonoski. One has dozens of records in Southern Australia and the other, a tropical species, has only a handful of sightings. "They are impressive," Mr Pogonoski said. He said there were iconic photos from history of about 10 to 15 people holding up a dead oarfish, including one found in California in 2013. "In Australia we know of at least 70 records in scientific databases of specimens that have washed up," he said. Mr Pogonoski said the CSIRO had an oarfish in its collection that washed up under the Tasman Bridge in Hobart more than a decade ago. Given its sea serpent-like features, he said he could see why it was the subject of myths. Dr Barrett said the body fish was "gelatinous" and it fed on crustaceans. "They aren't top predators, they don't swim fast," he said. And not much is known about how long they live for. "Something that [oarfish] gets up to 8m in length — it'd be at least 20 to 30 years to get to that length," Dr Barrett said. "Most deep-water species are very old — orange roughy [fish] for example can get to 120 years." The oarfish is associated with natural disasters and bad news, and the myth was revived when many of them were seen before the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Dr Barrett said there was no evidence the fish could sense a natural disaster. "It's just a random event, there's no real evidence there's any linkage," he said. "I can imagine a significant earthquake could disturb mid-water fish and stun them and lead to some coming up, but that's at the same time [as the diaster].

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