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Baby shock as villains stay

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 03 April 2013 | 22.16

Ashlee and Sophia from MKR taste test Manu's home cooking.

WESTERN Australian couple Andi Thomas and Josh Maldenis may have been eliminated from My Kitchen Rules, but they were the ones receiving congratulations after dropping the bombshell they're having a baby.

By contrast, the news villains Ashlee Pham and Sophia Pou had scraped through to win the elimination by a single point was greeted with dead silence.

No sugarcoating from MKR gatecrashers Ashlee and Sophie

Tonight's sudden death cook-off on My Kitchen Rules was shot back in late-November, and fashion buyer Thomas, 28 from the Perth suburb of Kingsley, is due to give birth in the first week of July.

MKR Gatecrashers Ashlee Pham and Sophia Pout. Picture: Attila Szilvasi. Picture: Szilvasi Attila Source: The Sunday Telegraph

She revealed she'd had to rush away from the elimination in between courses to throw-up due to severe morning sickness from a pregnancy that came as much a surprise to her, as the other competitors.

"Oh my God, was I psycho?" laughed Thomas. "It wasn't just the stress, it was because I was so sick that I was vomiting all day. It was just really, really hard. I couldn't keep it together for much longer in front of everybody."

Josh Maldenis and Andi Thomas had a bun in the oven on My Kitchen Rules and some harsh words for villains Ashlee Pham and Sophie Pou. Picture: Channel 7 Source: Supplied

Thomas said the nausea had given the couple "an inkling" she might have a bun in the oven as far back as the Market Food Challenge, but they'd only confirmed it with a test a couple of days before the elimination.

Although they immediately arranged to drop out of the competition for the health of their unborn child - they decided to fight the sudden death cook-off partly to have a crack at Ashlee and Sophia.

"It would look like we were copping out and I did want to beat them," she explained.

Sophia Pou and Ashlee Pham have survived but not without another tongue-lashing on My Kitchen Rules. Picture: Rohan Kelly Source: The Sunday Telegraph

Despite the animosity, the couple were as stunned as viewers at home when Sophia refused to return their wishes of good luck.

"I was being sincere - it's a sign of respect," she says. "If you're going to carry on like that it just shows what sort of a character you really are."

But unlike some, she doesn't believe the producers have put the villainous pair up to mischief to create drama and boost the ratings.

"Definitely not. What you see is definitely who they are, because the patterns don't change throughout the whole competition. They're nasty from the start and they're nasty at the end."

STL Pub date: 27/01/2013 Page: - 23/01/2013 STL HUMAN INTEREST: Sunday Telegraph. The My Kitchen Rules Judges, Pete Evans and Manu Feildel, are pictured at Colin Fassnidge's restaurant Four Fourteen in Surry Hills today. Pic. Tim Hunter N21581710 Picture: Tim Hunter Source: The Sunday Telegraph

Neither team performed well in the cook-off, with Ashlee and Sophia producing crispy skin duck without crispy skin and an over-sweet jackfruit coulis. Josh and Andi were criticised for serving melted parfaits and for throwing half their Burmese dry beef curry sauce - and much of its flavour - down the drain.

But Thomas says they took comfort from how close the result was. 

"I don't regret tipping it down the sink because it would have been way too runny," she says. "But it's like a big blur to me because a lot was going on. I don't think my whole heart, soul and energy was put into winning that day and I think any woman would understand throwing up in between courses."

My Kitchen Rules Ashlee and Sophia execute a cracking main dish which really impresses the judges.

Josh Maldenis and Andi Thomas had a bun in the oven on My Kitchen Rules and some harsh words for villains Ashlee Pham and Sophie Pou. Picture: Channel 7


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The mutant swine flu returns

No flu vaccine is "perfect" say doctors, but it is recommend that people get vaccinated. Source: AP

The swine flu virus has mutated and is returning to Australia. Picture: Supplied Source: news.com.au

  • Mutated form of swine flu returns
  • People aged 95 and older safest from infection
  • Symptoms include fever, cough, diarrhoea

IT's back, it's uglier than ever and it has more than four million Australians in its sights.

The swine flu, aka H1N1, which killed thousands of people when it swept the world in a pandemic in 2009, is returning in a new, mutated form to Australia, health authorities have warned as flu season begins.

And people aged 95 years and older may be safest from infection.

"We won't know how much it has mutated until people begin to get sick, but flu viruses mutate all the time as they pass through people and animals," said Dr Jeremy McAnulty, NSW Health director of health protection.

"Basically the virus makes mistakes in its reproductive cycle that help it survive as part of its evolutionary process and evade our immune systems.

"We won't know how well the flu vaccines will protect people from new strains of the two flus we expect this year – H1N1 and H3N2 – no flu vaccine is perfect.

"But we recommend people get vaccinated."

The 2009 swine flu outbreak is believed to have started at a Texan a pig farm, spread to pigs in Mexico, subsequently infecting the pigs' handlers.

Dr McAnulty said medical research has established that H1N1 was related to the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic that killed up to 100 million people, or three to five per cent of the world's population.

"There have been four pandemics, or apparently brand new strains of flu in the last hundred years and three in the 20th century, in 1918, the 1950s and the 1960s," he said.

"We've discovered that the H1 virus actually had a connection with the 1918 flu, so people who were around then and exposed to it have some resistance to H1."

"H1 affected more pregnant women and young people."

Swine flu killed 186 Australians in 2009 and officially affected 37,000. The global death toll of 18,500 was revised last year by Lancet magazine as closer to 250,000.

"The actual numbers are always much larger," Dr McAnulty said, "Typically 10 to 20 per cent of the population go down with flu every year."

Swine flu symptoms include a fever, cough, headache, tiredness, with more serious cases developing diarrhoea, pneumonia and encephalitis and lung and heart failure.

Vaccines are free for pregnant women, people over 65-years-old, Aboriginal people and patients with serious underlying medical conditions.

Dr McAnulty's recommended means of keeping health this winter include washing your hands after contact with others.

"And not just a quick wash of the hands. We recommend singing Happy Birthday as you wash your hands. It's about the right length of time for the process."
 


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The One Ring that launched them all

This is National Trust undated handout photo of a Roman gold ring that could have inspired J.R.R Tolkien to write "The Hobbit" and "The Lord of the Rings" is going on exhibition in England. Source: AP

IS THIS the One Ring that inspired them all? This 'cursed' ancient Roman ring may have launched Tolkien on his imaginative quest.

One Ring to rule them all,
One Ring to find them,
One Ring to bring them all
and in the darkness bind them

With this verse, J.R.R. Tolkien launched a storytelling revolution that has stuck at the top of the best-seller-lists ever since his books were released early last century.

Now the possible source of his inspiration is being revealed for all to see.

Britain's National Trust and the Tolkien Society are putting the artifact on display for fans of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings to decide for themselves whether this was Tolkien's precious ring of power.

Found in a field near a historic Roman town in southern England in 1785, the gold ring is inscribed in Latin, "Senicianus live well in God," and inset with an image of the goddess Venus. It is larger than average, weights 12 grams, and is believed to date from the 4th century.

The ring is believed to be linked to a curse tablet found at the site of a Roman temple dedicated to a god named Nodens in Gloucestershire, western England. The tablet says a man called Silvianus had lost a ring, and it asks Nodens to place a curse of ill health on Senicianus until he returned it to the temple.

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Official Trailer.

An archaeologist who looked into the connection between the ring and the curse tablet asked Tolkien, who was an Anglo-Saxon professor at Oxford University, to work on the etymology of the name Nodens in 1929.

The writer also visited the temple several times, and some believe he would have been aware of the existence of the Roman ring before he started writing The Hobbit.

"The influences most often cited for Tolkien's creation of The One Ring usually take the form of literary or legendary rings," said Lynn Forest-Hill, education officer for the Tolkien Society.

"It is, then, particularly fascinating to see the physical evidence of the (ring), with its links to Tolkien through the inscription associating it with a curse," she said.

The gold ring is displayed at The Vyne, a historic mansion in southern England.

Actor Elijah Wood in a scene from the 2001 film The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring.


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Couple sang karaoke, tried to 'get rich'

Mick Philpott, right, and wife Mairead are tearful following a fire at their Derby home which claimed the lives of six of his children, for which a jury foundthe couple guilty of the killing. Source: AP

WITHIN hours of the fatal fire that killed their six children, the behaviour of Mick and Mairead Philpott was already arousing the suspicions of the police.

The couple - who were overnight convicted of manslaughter for deliberately setting the deadly blaze - were keen to "get rich quick" off the back of the children's deaths, receiving at least $A4472 directly in cash gifts which they used to buy new sportswear and to get drunk at parties.

The pattern of inappropriate behaviour in the aftermath of the blaze also saw Philpott:

  • Fake a collapse and joke around in a hospital mortuary
  • Sing the Elvis Presley songs Suspicious Minds and My Boy on a pub karaoke machine and proposition a female police officer during a "jovial" visit to a hospital when he called his children 'little sh***'
  • Appear at a barbecue where his drunken wife showed off a new pair of £80 pink trainers.
  • Become 'fixated' with creaming off the remainder of a fund to cover the children's funeral costs and convert it into Argos vouchers.
  • Tell fundraisers to collect up and sell teddy bears which had been left outside the burned family home, ordering one wellwisher: "Shut up and just get on with it."
  • Play the entire of the second half of a charity football match staged to raise funds for the family

Prosecutors wanted to tell jurors about Philpott's private thirst to "spend" the cash or "get rich quick" from it, arguing he had been presenting a "very different public face". But the evidence was ruled inadmissible.
 
Detectives started to take a firm interest as soon as they began receiving witness statements which cast doubt on Philpott's claim to have made repeated attempts to reach his children.

The coffins bearing the bodies of six children who died in a house fire are carried into St Mary's Church in Derby, central England, for a funeral service on June 22, 2012. Mick and Mairead Philpott have been charged with the murders of their children Duwayne 13, Jade, 10, John, 9, Jack 8, Jesse, 6, and Jayden, 5, in the blaze on May 11, 2012. AFP PHOTO/PAUL ELLIS Source: AFP


While some heroic and soot-covered neighbours needed medical attention following their attempts to reach the six trapped children, Philpott appeared "spotlessly clean".

He was spotted wandering off from his 32-year-old wife and other relatives at the Royal Derby Hospital for a 30-minute discussion with his friend Paul Mosley.
 
He even had to be persuaded by police to travel with his dying stepson Duwayne, 13, when it was decided to transfer the teenager to Birmingham Children's Hospital. He died there three days later.

Fire damage at the Philpott house where six children died ina blaze in May 2012. Mick Philpott and his wife Mairead were convicted at Nottingham Crown Court in central England of the manslaughter. Source: AFP


Duwayne's godmother Jeannie Donnan said that in the hospital canteen "they would all sit quiet and then all of a sudden they'd all start a food fight and I was like, how can you have a food fight? You have just lost six kids … I was just sitting there thinking "no, this is not right".'

By the time of a press conference five days after the blaze, he and his wife were already under deep suspicion.

Philpott called the conference himself, ostensibly to thank the emergency services for their efforts to save his children. He appeared to be revelling in the "celebrity" of being the father of six dead youngsters.

Steve Cotterill, Derbyshire Assistant Chief Constable, compared Philpott's demeanour to that of an "excited child". Far from seeming nervous, Philpott chatted about his love of karaoke and singing Elvis songs.

He dabbed imaginary tears from his eyes during the brief conference, then performed a fake collapse in a corridor seconds after being ushered off stage. His wife said nothing throughout the event.

Just 24 hours earlier, the couple made their first of three "circus-like" visits to the mortuary, in which Philpott called his six dead children "little sh***", indulged in one-sided 'horseplay' with a police officer and asked for gin when he was offered water.

Mick Philpott, 56, and his 32-year-old wife Mairead were convicted at Nottingham Crown Court in central England of the manslaughter of the six children in the house fire in nearby Derby, on May 11 last year.

Prosecutors said the couple had set fire to their home in a bid to frame Philpott's 29-year-old ex-girlfriend and claim custody of the children they had together.

Philpott was supposed to have rescued the children through a bedroom window, but the fire was far greater than he expected.
 


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Split ends in Perth woman locked up in Bali jail

Sandra Cindy Sheed is being held in Denpasar Jail. Picture: PerthNow Source: PerthNow

A PERTH woman faces up to seven years in a Bali jail for stealing her ex-boyfriend's car and emptying his apartment, police in Indonesia said today.

Sandra Cindy Sheed, 42, is being held in Denpasar Jail after confessing to the theft of the car, a bed, and electrical items including a large-screen TV, DVD player and five speakers, said Denpasar Police Commissioner Ambariyadi Wijaya.

Ms Sheed was charged on Sunday after her Australian ex-boyfriend, Stephen Blackwell, returned to his Bali villa from a trip home to find it gutted.

"The victim was just coming back from Australia and he found his car and some electronic items were stolen," he said.

Police said they immediately suspected Ms Sheed when they realised the thief had used a key to steal the belongings.

"The victim and suspect have live together (sic) but now they have split," Commissioner Ambariyadi said.

Among Ms Sheed's alleged booty was a Toyota Hardtop, the appliances, water dispenser, food warmers and a TV antenna.

Police said they had notified the Australian consulate in Bali.

Bali locals said Ms Sheed sometimes worked as a nightclub promoter and had been visiting the party strip in Denpasar "for years".

"She is a pretty colourful character," said one nightclub operator who worked with Ms Sheed on launch last December.

The car allegedly stolen by Australian Sandra Sheed from her ex-boyfriend. Steed faces up to seven years in jail. Picture: Lukman

Goods allegedly stolen by Australian Sandra Sheed from her ex-boyfriend at Denpasar Police Station in Bali. Picture: Lukman


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Battle to thwart Game of Thrones pirates

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 02 April 2013 | 22.16

Peter Dinklage is Tyrion Lannister in Games of Thrones, which was illegally downloaded more than a million times last night. Source: AAP

ENTERTAINMENT studios are taking steps to prevent piracy by fast tracking TV shows but if last night's episode of Game of Thrones is anything to go by, it still isn't working.

Season three of the fantasy series aired last night on Foxtel,  two hours after it aired in the US.

However, the first episode of the season was illegally downloaded more than a million times last night, according to pirating website Torrent Freak.

And Australia had the highest piracy rate per capita, with nine per cent of Game of Thrones downloads heading to computers Down Under.

Per download, Australia ranked third, following the UK in second spot with 11.5 per cent and the US with 12.9 per cent.

"Never before has there been a torrent with so many people sharing a file at the same time, more than 160,000 simultaneous peers," Torrent Freak wrote on its website.


Experts say that the only way to prevent piracy from occuring is to close the delivery gap. To be fair, HBO, Foxtel and iTunes have taken steps to ensure the show is available in Australia within a reasonable timeframe. And to some extent it's working.
Game of Thrones aired on Foxtel two hours after it aired in the US, and on iTunes two days later.

Showcase's channel publicity manager, Vannessa Hollins told news.com.au that more than 224,000 people tuned in to Foxtel to watch Game of Thrones last night on its movie channel Showtime, and it was its "biggest audience ever and biggest share ever".

Brian Walsh, Foxtel executive director of television, told news.com.au that there was no doubt that subscribers embraced its express from the US strategy.

"Last night's brilliant result for Game of Thrones is a true testament to Foxtel's commitment to bringing our audience award-winning high quality drama they can watch with the rest of the world," he said.

And who don't have a Foxtel subscription can still access Game of Thrones on iTunes. Australian iTunes customers can buy a season pass for Game of Thrones in HD for $33.99 - that works out at less than $5 an episode. A standard-definition season pass costs $28.99. Once Apple customers have bought the season pass, episodes automatically download as they become available. The first episode of the show became available at 2am this morning. This is the first time Game of Thrones has been available on iTunes and Foxtel simultaneously.

The season pass for Game of Thrones became available on March 15 and since that time it has been sitting in the top spot of the TV season charts. Clearly there is demand for legal purchase of the show.

17/04/2012 FEATURES: Actor Alfie Allen in a scene from season 2 of TV series 'Game Of Thrones'. Pic Showcase. Pic. Supplied Source: Supplied


But close enough is not good enough, some experts say, claiming that two days is a long time to wait for a show that is being talked about all over the web.

Lucy O'Brien, entertainment editor of the world's largest entertainment and video game website, IGN told news.com.au that while Foxtel, iTunes and Home Box Office - the studio that owns and produces Game of Thrones - have taken steps to reduce piracy, they still don't understand the culture of their target audience.

Basically, Game of Thrones fans are nerds that refuse to wait.

"There is a massive social commentary being generated around Game of Thrones at the moment and it's exciting to be a part of," she said.

"There are few shows that hold so much appeal to both a niche nerdom and a much broader audience – we're talking brilliantly-written high fantasy here peppered with sex and violence - and these fans want to join in on the conversation as soon as it starts; with their friends, with other fans, on forums, in comment sections and on social media.

"A delay, even a 48-hour one, prevents Australians from doing that. And that's a problem."

Professor of Georgia Tech University, Ian Bogost shared Ms O'Brien's sentiments.

"Game of Thrones has: knights, dragons, wizards, wolves, zombies, pirates and ninjas," he tweeted.

"That's a m-fing pop culture hedge fund right there."

And while pirating may be rife, Game of Thrones' director Michael Lombardo doesn't seem too fussed.

Last month he admitted that piracy compliments sales rather than hurting them.

Co-director David Petrarca said at a WA university last month that the show thrives on "cultural buzz" via social media.

"That's how they survive," he said.

Petrarca said piracy could in fact help grease the wheels.

Game of Thrones extended sneak peak


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State funeral offered to Bridge family

LEGAL FIGHT: The family of the late WA Labor MP Ernie Bridge will continue the legal battle over his asbestos-related death. Picture: Colin Murty Source: The Australian

LEGAL FIGHT: The family of the late WA Labor MP Ernie Bridge will continue the legal battle over his asbestos-related death. Source: PerthNow

THE family of pioneering politician Ernie Bridge has been offered a state funeral by the West Australian government in recognition of his contribution to the community.

Mr Bridge, the Kimberley MLA from 1980 to 2001, died in Perth from asbestos-related diseases on Sunday, aged 76.

He was WA's first Aboriginal MP and the first indigenous cabinet minister in any Australian government.

As tributes flooded in for the father of four, country music singer and former pastoralist, WA Premier Colin Barnett confirmed Mr Bridge's family had been offered a state funeral.

"We have been in contact with Ernie Bridge's family and have made an offer of assistance, including a state funeral or memorial service, in recognition of the significant contribution Mr Bridge made to the state,'' Mr Barnett said.

"Again I would like to extend my condolences on behalf of the government for the family's loss.

"Ernie Bridge was a tremendously popular member of parliament who served the people of the Kimberley with dedication and passion and will be remembered with admiration for his significant involvement in the progress of our state.''

Having served as a minister under WA Labor leaders Brian Burke and Peter Dowding, Mr Bridge received a medal of the Order of Australia and was awarded a Centenary Medal for his commitment to Aboriginal affairs. He was also known for promoting the idea of piping water from the Kimberley to Perth via Kalgoorlie. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Mick Gooda said Mr Bridge was a man of integrity and courage.

"Ernie Bridge was not only a pioneering Aboriginal leader and giant of a role model for younger Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, he was also a unique individual who could count hundreds as friends,'' Commissioner Gooda said.

Earlier, it was confirmed Mr Bridge's family will be able to continue legal action over the asbestos-related diseases that led to his death on Sunday.

Weeks ago, Mr Bridge lodged a Supreme Court writ seeking damages from parties including companies run by two of the nation's richest women, Gina Rinehart's Hancock Prospecting and Angela Bennett's Wright Prospecting.

He claimed he was exposed to asbestos while overseeing the closure of mines and withdrawal of government services from Wittenoom in the late 1980s.

Lawyer Simon Millman of Slater and Gordon confirmed the family would be able to continue the legal fight because the claim had been lodged while he was still alive.

"It is an important reminder that if people are experiencing asbestos-related diseases it is imperative that legal proceedings be started in their lifetime,'' Mr Millman told ABC radio.

"Mr Bridge appropriately commenced his proceedings and that will now mean his estate, his family and loved ones are able to proceed with the claim notwithstanding he has passed away.''

The family have not yet indicated whether they will continue the action.

Mr Millman said the legal process could continue, but the grieving process should be given priority.


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Mice infestation hits Hoyts Carousel

Moviegoers were horrified at a mouse infestation at a Hoyts cinema in Perth

SERIOUS: A mouse helps itself to a patron's food at Hoyts Carousel at the weekend. Source: PerthNow

A MICE infestation at a busy Perth cinema has prompted movie-goers to take to social media to voice their disgust.

Hoyts has confirmed through its Facebook page that it was "undertaking preventative measures" at its Carousel La Premiere cinema after patrons watching GI Joe yesterday found mice crawling over their meals once the lights went down.

The cinema complex is open today.

Customer Sue Donnelly posted yesterday on the Hoyts Facebook page, along with a photo of a mouse on a plate of chips: "Today I made the huge mistake of going to Hoyts La Premiere at Carosel (sic) to see GI Joe. I was absolutely disgusted to find our cinema crawling with rats/mice. My granddaughter flicked away two mice.

"Upon complaining at the front desk about the infestation I was told the problem was already known about and nothing could be done by an exterminator for 2 weeks! To add to my disgust when I returned to my seat one of the vermin was eating her chips!


"I was given my ticket fee and food cost back and left half way through the movie. I was offered free tickets in General Admission or at Booragoon Hoyts and turned down both, I was not looking for freebies. Absolutely disgusted I will not be back."

A stream of similar complaints and queries poured in from customers on the page.

Hoyts issued a statement confirming there were mice in the Hoyts Carousel La Premiere cinema.

It said Hoyts had been undertaking preventative measures at the cinema and a service provider was attending to the problem. The cinema company said every effort was made to ensure all sites were maintained to a level that met stringent standards set by local council health regulators.

A City of Canning spokesman said the local government had a complaint about mice at the cinema complex in September 2012 and yesterday's issue was the first time one had been made about mice consuming food in the cinema.

He said health inspectors were visiting the site today and working with Carousel owner Westfield and Hoyts to resolve the problem.

"We inspect the premises twice a year and the food preparation area more often, especially once we have received complaints," he said.


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Stomp kill accused pleads not guilty

Irish backpacker David Greene. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

Irish backpacker David Byas, second from left in grey top. Picture:The Herald Source: Supplied

A MARTIAL arts enthusiast who allegedly stomped on the heads of his unconscious victims "like a crazy monster" has pleaded not guilty to murder.

Family members of deceased Irish backpacker David Greene laughed as Luke James Wentholt, 31, pleaded guilty to seven assault-related charges but not guilty to Mr Greene's murder at Melbourne Magistrates' Court this evening.

Mr Wentholt's then girlfriend Shayla Pullen told the court this morning she tried to stop his repeated and "forceful stomping" on Mr Greene and his friend, David Byas, at a St Kilda boarding house about 1am on August 26 last year.

"They were both bleeding, (blood) was just everywhere," Ms Pullen said via videolink.

Mr Greene, 30, died at the Alfred Hospital on September 7, almost two weeks after the attack.

Mr Byas suffered serious injuries and was in a coma for four days before being transferred to a rehab facility.

Ms Pullen said they had been drinking with friends at the Lynedoch Avenue hostel, where both Wentholt and Mr Greene lived, before the two got into an argument.

"I think (Wentholt) was drunk. I haven't seen him that drunk before," Ms Pullen said in a police statement.

She said she believed Wentholt was angry because Mr Greene kept joking about accidentally seeing her partially naked earlier that week.

"He said, 'Dave, I want to talk to you outside', in a stern voice," Ms Pullen told the court.

She said she heard Mr Wentholt and Mr Greene arguing and then "smashing noises", followed by another Irish voice.

"I heard like a wrestling and smashing, like someone was hitting up against something," she said.

Housemate Christine Babuczki said Mr Wentholt returned to the living room and physically attacked the other partygoers, none of whom were seriously injured.

Ms Pullen, a hospitality worker, said she went to the hallway and saw the two Irish backpackers lying still on the floor and Mr Wentholt, shirtless and shoeless, "forcefully stomping" on their heads.

"I just remember there was lots of blood - every time he stomped, there was lots of blood," Ms Pullen said.

"I ran at him and pushed him away from them because he wouldn't stop stomping."

Mr Wentholt pleaded guilty to one count of intentionally causing serious injury to Mr Byas, three counts of intentionally causing injury and three counts of common law assault.

He pleaded not guilty to murdering Mr Greene.

Ms Pullen said she had been dating Wentholt – a work colleague who trained in jujitsu up to five times a week - for three weeks.

Forensic pathologist Professor David Ranson told the court Mr Greene died from a head injury, likely a result of one or more blows to the head.

He said the diffuse traumatic axonal injury was caused by the application of force, which shifted the brain inside the skull.

Professor Ranson said he could not exclude the possibility Mr Greene was suffering from brain injury prior to the alleged stomping and was unable to say whether stomping or kicking caused or worsened the injury.

He said there was no indication that a hammer face caused any of the injuries.

Detective Acting Sergeant Nathan Toey said a hammer covered in Mr Wentholt's blood was located at the crime scene, but there was no evidence it was used in the attack.

He said in his statement an injury on Mr Wentholt's arm may have been self-inflicted.

Magistrate Peter Mealy committed Wentholt to stand trial for murder and asked prosecutor Peter Rose, SC, to pass on his condolences for the "truly horrifying event" to Mr Greene's family.

Mr Wentholt was remanded in custody to appear at the Supreme Court for a directions hearing on April 17.


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North Korea to restart nuclear site

Satellite image provided by GeoEye shows the area around the Yongbyon nuclear facility in Yongbyon, North Korea.  (AP Photo/GeoEye, File) Source: AP

NORTH Korea said it will escalate production of nuclear weapons material, including restarting a long-shuttered plutonium reactor, in what outsiders see as Pyongyang's latest attempt to extract US concessions by raising fears of war.

A spokesman for the North's General Department of Atomic Energy said scientists will quickly begin work "readjusting and restarting" a uranium enrichment plant and a graphite-moderated, 5-megawatt reactor that could produce a bomb's worth of plutonium each year.

Experts considered the uranium announcement to be a public declaration from Pyongyang that it will make highly enriched uranium that could be used for bomb fuel.

North Korea nuclear test left few clues

The plutonium reactor began operations in 1986 but was shut down in 2007 as part of international nuclear disarmament talks that have since stalled. It wasn't immediately clear if North Korea had already begun work to restart facilities at its main Nyongbyon nuclear complex. Experts estimate it could take anywhere from three months to a year to reactivate the reactor.

The announcement will boost concerns in Washington and among its allies about North Korea's timetable for building a nuclear-tipped missile that can reach the United States, although it is still believed to be years away from developing that technology.

North Korea propaganda shows Kim Jong Un's softer side

South Korean anti-aircraft armoured vehicles move over a temporary bridge during a river-crossing military drill in Hwacheon near the border with North Korea on April 1. Picture: AFP

The nuclear vows and a rising tide of threats in recent weeks are seen as efforts by Pyongyang to force disarmament-for-aid talks with Washington and to increase domestic loyalty to young North Korean leader Kim Jong Un by portraying him as a powerful military commander.

Hwang Jihwan, a North Korea expert at the University of Seoul, said the North "is keeping tension and crisis alive to raise stakes ahead of possible future talks with the United States."

"North Korea is asking the world, 'What are you going to do about this?'" he said.

US sends destroyed vessel to Korean coast

The unidentified North Korean atomic spokesman said the measure is meant to resolve the country's acute electricity shortage but is also for "bolstering up the nuclear armed force both in quality and quantity," according to a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

The statement suggests the North will do more to produce highly enriched uranium, which like plutonium can be used to make nuclear weapons. Uranium worries outsiders because the technology needed to make highly enriched uranium bombs is much easier to hide than huge plutonium facilities.

South Korean soldiers wearing gas masks gather at a military training field on the border city of Paju. South Korea's new president promised a strong military response to any North Korean provocation after Pyongyang announced that the two countries were now in a state of war. Picture: AFP

North Korea previously insisted that its uranium enrichment was for electricity - meaning low enriched uranium.

Kim Jin Moo, a North Korea expert at the Korea Institute for Defence Analyses in South Korea, said that by announcing it is "readjusting" all nuclear facilities, including a uranium enrichment plant, North Korea "is blackmailing the international community by suggesting that it will now produce weapons-grade, highly enriched uranium."

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said that North Korea appears to be "on a collision course with the international community."

Speaking in Andorra, the former South Korean foreign minister said the crisis has gone too far and international negotiations are urgently needed.

China, Pyongyang's only major economic and diplomatic supporter, expressed unusual disappointment with Pyongyang.

"We noticed North Korea's statement, which we think is regrettable," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei. Seoul also called it "highly regrettable."

South Korean Catholics pray for peace on the Korean Peninsula during an annual Easter service at Myeongdong Catholic Cathedral in Seoul. Picture: AP

The North's plutonium reactor generates spent fuel rods laced with plutonium and is the core of Nyongbyon. It was disabled under a 2007 deal made at now-dormant aid-for-disarmament negotiations involving the North, the US, South Korea, Japan, China and Russia.

In 2008, North Korea destroyed the cooling tower at Nyongbyon in a show of commitment, but the deal later stalled after North Korea balked at allowing intensive international fact-checking of its past nuclear activities. Pyongyang pulled out of the talks after international condemnation of its long-range rocket test in April 2009.

North Korea "is making it clear that its nuclear arms program is the essence of its national security and that it's not negotiable," said Sohn Yong-woo, a professor at the Graduate School of National Defence Strategy of Hannam University in South Korea.

Pyongyang conducted its third nuclear test in February, prompting a new round of UN sanctions that have infuriated its leaders.

North Korea has since declared that the armistice ending the Korean War in 1953 is void, shut down key military phone and fax hotlines with Seoul, threatened to launch nuclear and rocket strikes on the US mainland and its allies and, most recently, declared at a high-level government assembly that making nuclear arms and a stronger economy are the nation's top priorities.

The Korean Peninsula is technically is a state of war because a truce, not a peace treaty, ended the Korean War. The United States stations 28,500 troops in South Korea as a deterrent to North Korea.

A couple looks at a map of railroad linking two Koreas, which the North and South hope to reconnect as part of an agreement reached in 2000, near the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea. Picture: AP

Washington has said it takes the threats seriously, though White House press secretary Jay Carney said Monday the US has not detected any military mobilisation or repositioning of forces from Pyongyang.

The North's rising rhetoric has been met by a display of US military strength, including flights of nuclear-capable bombers and stealth jets at annual South Korean-US military drills that the allies call routine but that Pyongyang claims are invasion preparations.

South Koreans are familiar with provocations from the North, but its rhetoric over the last few weeks has raised worries.

"This is a serious concern for me," said Heo Jeong-ja, 70, a cleaning lady in Seoul.

"The country has to stay calm, but North Korea threatens us every day."

Earlier Tuesday, a senior South Korean official told foreign journalists that there had been no sign of large-scale military movement in North Korea, though South Korea remains alert to the possibility of a provocation. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak publicly to the media.

North Korea added its 5-megawatt plutonium reactor to its nuclear complex at Nyongbyon in 1986, and Pyongyang is believed to have exploded plutonium devices in its first two nuclear tests, in 2006 and 2009.

There had long been claims by the US and others that Pyongyang was also pursuing a secret uranium program. In 2010, the North unveiled to visiting Americans a uranium enrichment program at Nyongbyon.

Analysts say they don't believe North Korea currently has mastered the miniaturisation technology needed to build a warhead that can be mounted on a missile, and the extent of its uranium enrichment efforts is also unclear.

Scientist and nuclear expert Siegfried Hecker, one of the Americans on the 2010 visit to Nyongbyon, has estimated that Pyongyang has 24 to 42 kilograms of plutonium - enough for perhaps four to eight rudimentary bombs similar to the plutonium weapon used on Nagasaki, Japan in World War II.

It's not known whether the North's latest atomic test, in February, used highly enriched uranium or plutonium stockpiles.

South Korea and other countries have so far failed to detect radioactive elements that may have leaked from the test and which could determine what kind of device was used.


 
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