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Thursday, June 30, 2011

Torres Strait Islands

Torres Strait Islands are a group of at least 274 small islands which lie in Torres Strait, the waterway separating far northern continental Australia's Cape York Peninsula and the island of New Guinea. They are mostly part of Queensland, a constituent State of the Commonwealth of Australia, with a special status fitting the native (Melanesian) land rights, administered by the Torres Strait Regional Authority. A few islands very close to the coast of mainland New Guinea belong to the Western Province of Papua New Guinea, most importantly Daru Island with the provincial capital, Daru.

History
It was at Possession Island that Lieutenant James Cook first claimed British sovereignty over the eastern part of Australia in 1770. The London Missionary Society led by Rev. Samuel Macfarlane arrived on Erub (Darnley Island) on 1 July 1871. This is referred to by the Islanders as "The Coming of the Light" and is celebrated annually by all Island communities on 1 July. The Torres Strait Islands were annexed in 1879 by Queensland. They thus became part of the British colony of Queensland and after 1901 of the Australian state of Queensland although some of them lie just off the coast of New Guinea.
In 1898-1899 the Torres Strait Islands were visited by the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition led by Alfred Cort Haddon.
In 1904, the Torres Strait Islanders become subject to the Aboriginal Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act. 1897 (QLD)
The proximity to Papua New Guinea became an issue when it was moving towards independence from Australia, which it gained in 1975. The Torres Strait Islanders insisted that they were Australians, but the Papua New Guinea government objected to complete Australian control over the waters of the strait.
Eventually an agreement was struck whereby the islands and their inhabitants remain Australian, but the maritime boundary between Australia and Papua New Guinea runs through the centre of the strait. In practice the two countries co-operate closely in the management of the strait's resources.

Geography
The islands are distributed across an area of some 48 000 km². The distance across the Strait from Cape York to New Guinea is approximately 150 km at the narrowest point; the islands lie scattered in between, extending some 200–300 km from furthest east to furthest west.
The Torres Strait itself was formerly a land bridge which connected the present-day Australian continent with New Guinea (in a single landmass called Sahul or Australia-New Guinea). This land bridge was most recently submerged by rising sea levels at the termination of the last ice age glaciation (approximately 12,000 years ago), forming the Strait which now connects the Arafura and Coral seas. Many of the western Torres Strait Islands are actually the remaining peaks of this land bridge which were not submerged when the ocean levels rose.
The islands and their surrounding waters and reefs provide a highly diverse set of land and marine ecosystems, with niches for many rare or unique species. Saltwater crocodiles inhabit the islands along with neighboring Queensland and Papua New Guinea. Marine animals of the islands include dugongs (an endangered species of sea mammal mostly found in New Guinean waters), as well as Green, Hawksbill and Flatback Sea turtles.

Top Western islands
The islands in this cluster lie very close to the southwestern coastline of New Guinea (the closest is less than 4 km offshore). Saibai (one of the largest of the Torres Strait Islands) and Boigu are low-lying islands which were formed by deposition of sediments and mud from New Guinean rivers into the Strait accumulating on decayed coral platforms. Vegetation on these islands mainly consists of mangrove swamps, and they are prone to flooding.
The other main island in this group, Dauan (Mt Cornwallis), is a smaller island with steep hills, composed largely of granite. This island actually represents the northernmost extent of the Great Dividing Range, the extensive series of mountain ranges which runs along almost the entire eastern coastline of Australia. This peak became an island as the ocean levels rose at the end of the last ice age.
See also: Birds of Boigu, Saibai and Dauan Islands (Torres Strait)

Near Western islands
The islands in this cluster lie south of the Strait's midway point, and are also largely high granite hills with mounds of basaltic outcrops, formed from old peaks of the now submerged land bridge. Moa (Banks Island) is the second-largest in the Torres Strait, and Badu (Mulgrave Island) is slightly smaller and fringed with extensive mangrove swamps. Other smaller islands include Mabuiag, Pulu and further to the east Naghir (correct form Nagi) (Mt. Ernest). Culturally this was the most complex part of Torres Strait, containing three of the four groupings/dialects of the Western-central Islanders. Nagi was/is culturally/linguistically a Central Island (Kulkalaig territory), Moa was/is a Kawalaig (Kaurareg) island, with two groups, the Italaig of the south, and the Muwalaig of the north. The Muwalgal and Italgal were the same people as those of the Inner Islands. Badu and Mabuiag were/are the Maluigal Deep Sea People.

Inner islands
These islands, also known as the Thursday Island group, lie closest to Cape York Peninsula, and their topography and geological history is very similar. Muralag (Prince of Wales Island) is the largest of the Strait's islands, and forms the centre of this closely grouped cluster. The much smaller Waiben Thursday Island is the region's administrative centre and most heavily populated. Another small island is Dumaralug Island which is found a few hundred meters south of Muralag. Several of these islands have permanent freshwater springs, and some were also mined for gold in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Because of their proximity to the Australian mainland, they have also been centres of pearling and fishing industries. Nurupai Horn Island holds the region's airport, and as a result is something of an entrepôt with inhabitants drawn from many other communities. Kiriri (Hammond Island) is the other permanently settled island of this group; Tuined (Possession Island) is noted for Lt. James Cook's landing there in 1770. Moa in the Near Western group is culturally and linguistically speaking part of this group.

Central islands
This cluster is more widely distributed in the middle of Torres Strait, consisting of many small sandy cays surrounded by coral reefs, similar to those found in the nearby Great Barrier Reef. The more northerly islands in this group however, such as Gebar (Two Brothers) and Iama (Yam Island), are high basaltic outcrops, not cays. Culturally-speaking, Nagi of the Near-Western group is also part of this group, and also has high basaltic outcropping. The low-lying inhabited coral cays, such as Poruma (Coconut Island), Warraber Island and Masig (Yorke Island) are mostly less than 2–3 km long, and no wider than 800 m. Several have had problems with saltwater intrusion.

Eastern islands
The islands of this group (principally Mer (Murray Island), Dauar and Waier, with Erub Island and Ugar (Stephen Island) further north) are formed differently from the rest. They are volcanic in origin, the peaks of volcanoes which were formerly active in Pleistocene times. Consequently their hillsides have rich and fertile red volcanic soils, and are thickly vegetated. The easternmost of these are less than 20 km from the northern extension of the Great Barrier Reef.

Regional Authority
An Australian Commonwealth statutory authority called the Torres Strait Regional Authority (TSRA) is responsible for governance of the islands. The TSRA has an elected board comprising 20 representatives from the Torres Strait Islander and Aboriginal communities resident in the Torres Strait region.
There is one representative per established local community. These board members are elected under the Queensland Community Services (Torres Strait) Act 1984 and Division 5 of the ATSIC Act 1989. The TSRA itself falls under the portfolio responsibilities of the Australian Government Department of Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs (previously under the Department of Immigration and Citizenship). The administrative centre of the islands is Thursday Island.
The TSRA now represents the local communities at both Commonwealth and State levels - previously State representation was via a (closed since March 2008) Queensland statutory authority, the Island Coordinating Council (ICC).

Local (shire) level government
At the local level there are two authorities, the Shire of Torres which governs several islands and portions of Cape York Peninsula and operates as a Queensland Local Government Area. The Torres Strait Islands Region, created in 2008, is the embodiment of 15 former island councils, these areas have been relinquished by the Government of Queensland to specific Islander and Aboriginal Councils under the provisions of the Community Services (Torres Strait) Act 1984 and the Community Services (Aboriginal) Act 1984.
Badu Island Council
Bamaga Island Council
Boigu Island Council
Dauan Island Council
Erub Island Council
Hammond Island Council
Iama Island Council
Kubin Island Council
Mabuiag Island Council
Mer Island Council
Poruma Island Council
Saibai Island Council
Seisia Island Council
St Pauls Island Council
Ugar Island Council
Warraber Island Council
Yorke Island Council

Demographics
Torres Strait Islanders, the indigenous peoples of the islands, are Melanesians, culturally most akin to the coastal peoples of Papua New Guinea. Thus they are regarded as being distinct from other Aboriginal peoples of Australia, and are generally referred to separately. There are also two Torres Strait Islander communities on the nearby coast of the mainland, Bamaga and Seisia.
According to the 2001 Australian census ABS figures, the population of the Torres Strait Islands was 8,089, of whom 6,214 were either of Torres Strait Islander or Aboriginal origin.
There are two indigenous languages spoken on the islands: the Western-Central Torres Strait Language (called by various names, including Kala Lagaw Ya, Kalaw Kawaw Ya and Kowrareg), and the Eastern Torres Language Meriam Mir. One language, Torres Strait Creole, or Brokan, is used throughout Torres Strait, in neighbouring Papua as far as the West Papuan border area, and Cape York, as well as in many Island communities in Mainland Australia. This is a creole English similar to the closely related Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea.

Family to shed light on Torres Strait Islands

Former PNG health minister, Sir Peter Barter has spoken out strongly against any move by Australian authorities to refuse TB treatment to PNG citizens in the Torres Strait.

Australian health workers in the Torres Strait won't have funding to treat sick PNG nationals as from tomorrow... but that won't stop patients turning up daily for treatment for potentially deadly tuberculosis. Australia's financial year ends today, June 30.

Sir Peter Barter, an Australia-born now retired PNG politician, says it would be inhumane and criminal to turn away PNG citizens crossing the border for needed medical treatment in the Torres Strait.

The celebration marks the 140th anniversary of the culturally significant ''Coming of the Light'', which was the name given to the London Missionary Society's arrival in Torres Strait.

Uniting all the arts organisations in the South Bank precinct for the first time, the landmark celebration will feature art collections, performances, lectures and activities for all ages from July 1 to October 23, including:

* An exhibition of archival materials from the State Library of Queensland's collections, Strait Home, from July 1 to October 23;

* Land, Sea and Sky: Contemporary Art from the Torres Strait Islands, an exhibition of work by more than 40 artists at GoMA from July 1 to October 9;

* Awakening: Stories from the Torres Strait, a collection of objects, including ceremonial masks and archaeological findings at the Queensland Museum from current to October 2;

* The 2011 Mabo Oration at QPAC on July 3; and more.

Arts Minister Rachel Nolan said Torres Strait Islands: A Celebration was the most extensive celebration of Torres Strait Islander arts and culture ever mounted.

Jillian and her mother were both born in Torres Strait and her five oldest children, although born in Australia, also spent their early years in Torres Strait.

At sunset tomorrow, they will join other Torres Strait Islander men, women and children in singing contemporary and traditional hymns and music from Torres Strait.

The Voices for the Light choir will perform from 5 to 6pm

Man threatened to cut out own tumour

HOSPITAL patient who became so agitated after a long wait he threatened to perform elective surgery on himself was a before a criminal court today.
Ian James Bool was booked in for surgery at the QEII Hospital in Brisbane's south to have a benign lump removed from his head but became upset after he waited 6½ hours without being operated on.
Prosecutor Carson Lloyd told the District Court in Brisbane at one stage Bool told a nurse: "Give me a scalpel and I'll cut the f------ thing out myself."
Mr Lloyd said Bool then began to pace up and down before going to the reception desk where he grabbed a box cutter.
Bool had extended the blade and waved it in the direction of a nearby doctor saying: "I'll f------ cut it off and you stitch it up."
Hospital security was called and Bool was escorted out.

Bool, 53, pleaded guilty to going armed in public to cause fear on June 28 last year.
Barrister Eon MacGiolla Ri, for Bool, said his client had waited 18 months for the surgery and had arrived at the hospital at 7am.
He said Bool had been fasting since the day before and was cold and hungry by 1.30pm.
Bool was also worried about his elderly mother who was waiting for him in a car outside.
Judge Terry Martin, SC, noted Bool had been placed on probation in February for other offences after spending 151 days on remand.

Defence barrister, Eoin Mac Giolla Ri, said his client had sat in the waiting room for several hours wearing nothing but a hospital gown.

He was also hungry after fasting since the previous day, and had become frustrated that other patients were being seen before him.

He said his client was bipolar and hypermanic, and was vulnerable to impulsive acts.

Bool was escorted from the hospital by security after the incident, and is still waiting to have the growth removed.

Bool pleaded guilty today to one count of going armed to cause fear.

He was sentenced to six months' probation, and ordered to undergo psychiatric treatment as required.

Parents of injured Brit appeal

PARENTS of Daniel Moore appeared at a press conference in Australia today and pleaded for a taxi driver to come forward.

Daniel, 21, from Marske, still remains in a critical condition in hospital, four days after he was found lying in the road at an intersection in a suburb of Sydney.

At a press conference today, his parents, along with New South Wales Police, appealed for a taxi driver, who may have been the last person to see Daniel before he was injured, to contact police.

Dad Robin Moore said: “Daniel has been living and working in Australia for two years now and he has loved every moment of it.

“We are pleading for the taxi driver to come forward. He may well be the only person who can help us figure out what happened to Daniel.”

Daniel was found by police patrolling Pittwater Road and Collingwood Street, in Manly, a seaside resort close to Sydney, at 3.50am on Sunday.

Daniel's mother Valerie Rutters said her son was fulfilling a life-long dream when he left home to travel around Australia nearly two years ago.

"From being a child he used to say `When I'm 16 will you buy me a ticket to Australia'," she said, visibly emotional.

Mr Moore said Sydney was to be his son's new home after he was recently granted sponsorship to live in Australia.

Detective Inspector Luke Arthurs, crime manager at Manly Local Area Command, said police hadn't ruled anything out and could be dealing with either an assault or an accident.

He confirmed Daniel's friend did not pay the taxi fare but would not speculate further.

"The friend got out of the taxi, but the friend was unsure if Daniel got out at the same time," Det Ins Luke Arthurs said.

"The mate did not pay the fare."

Det Insp Arthurs called on the taxi driver to come forward.

"We just need to speak to the taxi driver and see what, if anything, he knows about this."

He urged anybody who may have seen anything in the area around Pittwater Road and Collingwood Road at around 3.50am (AEST) on Sunday morning to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Daniel's parents will remain in Sydney "as long as it takes" until their son has recovered.

Bubblewrap Bandit nabbed, say police

Police allege the 23-year-old concealed his face with the packing material before using a knife to rob a Main Beach convenience store on June 26.

Officers tracked the alleged bandit to a Main Beach home, where he was arrested on Wednesday.

He's been charged with armed robbery and will face the Southport Magistrates Court on Thursday.

Officers tracked the alleged bandit to a Main Beach home, where he was arrested yesterday.
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He's been charged with armed robbery and will face the Southport Magistrates Court today.
Meanwhile, a gang has broken into a Gold Coast surf club, smashing up fridges and stealing alcohol and cash before fleeing.
Police say about five men wearing balaclavas broke into the Miami Life Saving Club about 10pm last night.
Police are looking for a small white sedan seen in the area at the time.

Charles Teo

Charles "Charlie" Teo AM,  born 24 December 1957 is a high profile Australian neurosurgeon.

Teo was born to Chinese Singaporean parents who immigrated to Australia. He went to high school at The Scots College and graduated with Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery from the University of New South Wales.
He is married to Genevieve Teo (née Agnew); the couple have four daughters.


Neurosurgery
Teo trained in Sydney, but worked for a decade in the United States, where he still teaches. His sub-speciality is paediatric neurosurgery. He is the director of the Centre for Minimally Invasive Neurosurgery at Prince of Wales Hospital. and the founder of Cure For Life Foundation.
Teo has received much media attention as something of a miracle worker, but some neurosurgeons have criticised him as being too radical, offering "false hope" to patients who are believed to have an incurable brain cancer or a brain tumour that is dangerously located. Teo has resigned from the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia and argues that delaying the death of patients with an incurable brain cancer is worthwhile if it is their wish and that patients who seek his surgery are determined to live with a quality of life, despite being informed the surgery itself carries a sometimes considerable risk.
A story about Teo and one of his patients, the young pianist Aaron McMillan, is detailed in the book Life in his Hands by Susan Wyndham. A patient of Charlie Teo's, Sally White, has written of her experiences in Three Quotes From A Plumber: How a Second Opinion Changed the Life of a Woman with a Brain Tumour Teo has also been featured in several TV programs including ABC's Q&A, Good Medicine, Sixty Minutes, Last Chance Surgery, Australian Story and Enough Rope with Andrew Denton.
Teo gave the 50th Anniversary Errol Solomon Meyers Memorial Lecture at the University of Queensland in August 2007. In July 2009, Teo was a keynote speaker at the Australian Medical Students' Association National Convention, held in Brisbane, Australia.
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Manslaughter surgeon attacked in prison

Dr Teo said he had met fellow brain surgeon Suresh Nair in 2000, when the latter was a registrar at Prince of Wales Hospital.

Although describing Nair as "a bit odd" and "awkward socially", Dr Teo said the pair had spent up to 16 hours a day working together and become close.

"I spent so many hours with him, I got to know the real Suresh in that year... I had nothing but good things to say about him," Dr Teo told the District Court.

"(He is) a fine person, a fine character with a good heart ... (He had) a peaceful sort of soul who cared very much for his patients and I thought he was an excellent neurosurgeon."

Dr Teo said he knew nothing of Nair's cocaine addiction and was shocked when Nair was initially charged with the manslaughter of one escort Victoria McIntyre in February 2009, and the murder of call girl Brazilian national Suellen Domingues Zaupa nine months later.

He has ultimately pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of Ms Zaupa, and one count of drug supply relating to Ms McIntyre's death.

Nair, 42, also pleaded guilty to a charge of supplying a prohibited drug while on bail last January.

A preliminary hearing of the case revealed Nair's penchant for having "model type" escorts visit his apartment to consume large amounts of cocaine, sometimes in "rock" form he inserted into their bodies.

There are many surgeons who, because of ego, would rather let their patients die than refer them to someone else," Dr Teo said.
"But he would refer patients to me regularly that he thought I could help with."
Dr Teo said that he had initially found Nair to have an "odd personality" when they started working together at Prince of Wales in 2001.
But over the course of many hours spent together the two had formed a very close bond, he said.
"I don't believe that Suresh would ever operate on a patient under the influence of drugs.
"His patient care was of the highest level.
"Patients speak very highly of him."
Dr Teo said that his family and colleagues had not wanted him to "stick his neck out" by supporting Nair but that he had wanted to support his former colleague and friend.

Tsunami woes reach flood-hit beef jobs

JBS Australia's Beef City Meat Plant at Toowoomba will close from Friday, to July 15.

A spokesman said it was the first time in the plant's history that it had shut down due to poor trading conditions.

Factors in the decision were the high Australian dollar, increasing labour costs and government fees making Australian beef uncompetitive in international markets.

"At the same time we are faced with these challenges here in Australia, cheaper US beef is rapidly taking the place of Australian beef on shelves across the northern Asian markets," the spokesman said.

Opposition agriculture spokesman Andrew Cripps said it was a tough time for the entire beef sector.

Live exporters have been affected by the federal government's decision to suspend trade with some Indonesian facilities.

Mr Cripps said it was a "Labor-created crisis".

While I remain confident operations will start again soon at JBS, we will watch the situation closely."

JBS's head office did not return calls yesterday.

The vast Beef City abattoir, which processes 1100 cattle a day, employs 940 people and is Toowoomba's biggest job provider. JBS operates 10 abattoirs in Australia and five cattle feedlots.

Those reporting for duty at Beef City yesterday were told that operations would cease in preparation for the two-week shutdown because of the slump in demand from Japan.

Sixty per cent of the plant's output is sent to Japan, Beef City manager Justin McCormick said. The company was seeking alternative customers, domestically and abroad, and could bring forward the start-up if any were found for the high-quality output from Toowoomba.

Workers would be able to take accrued annual leave while production was suspended, Mr McCormick told The Australian. A limited number of positions could be opened up at JBS's Dinmore plant in Brisbane's west for those who had no time owing.

Slaughtermen Scott Mengel and Robert Beilefeld said they were shocked by the development. Both have pregnant wives at home, due to give birth soon.

"I've heard the shut-down could extend to three or four weeks. It's devastating. I don't know what I'll do. I have a mortgage to pay. I'll have to find work somewhere else until the abattoir reopens," Mr Beilefeld said.