Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Arson suspected in Swan Valley fire

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 09 Maret 2013 | 22.16

BALGA: Firefighters have also been called to a bushfire which has started near Balga in Perth's north-east. Source: PerthNow

FIREFIGHTERS were last night called out to another suspicious scrub fire in the Swan Valley area.

About 1.45am the Department of Fire and Emergency Services received reports of a fire on Henley Brook Ave near Asturian Drive in Henley Brook.
 
Eight fire crews brought the fire under control by about 2.24am and it was fully extinguished by 4.15am.
 
Authorities believe the fire, which was 100m by 60m in size, was deliberately lit.
 
It comes after arson squad detectives issued a public plea yesterday for information about a dozen fires which had been lit in the Swan Valley area during the week.

Firefighters were also called out this afternoon to deal with a small bushfire which broke out in Balga in Perth's north-east, but the blaze was quickly brought under control and extinguished in a few minutes.


 
 


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Sword-fighting and magic at Medieval Fayre

Medieval Fayre enthusiasts Kim Edwards, with her children Arian, Ryker and Tane, Rob Braun, Steve Osborne, Peter Osborne, and Dianne Magnay. Picture: Will Russell Source: PerthNow

PUT down that smartphone and grab a sword for some olden days fun at the Perth Medieval Fayre on March 16.

A huge range of Medieval-type activities will be on show at the Supreme Court Gardens from 10am, with the day's festivities leading into a night of entertainment from 5.30pm to 9.30pm.

Crowds can watch sword fighting and fencing displays as well as demonstrations involving birds of prey, sword swallowers and jesters or jugglers and circus acts.

People can also participate in crafts, artisan workshops, camel and pony rides along with many  other activities for adults and children.

Organiser Stephen Osborne said the fayre was for all ages.

"We invite one and all to join with us at Perth's only Medieval Fayre as we travel back to a time when knights, lords and ladies graced the cities of the world," Mr Osborne said.


"The diverse entertainment on stage and around the grounds will delight your senses. You can cheer your champion as they battle through the tourney or marvel at the skills of the artisans displaying medieval arts and crafts.

"For children, there's a lot to see and do including Punch and Judy puppet shows, pony rides and have your face painted. Don't forget to learn sword fighting with a sword fighting master or create a sand picture.

"The spectacular and unique interactive night entertainment and fire show will include a gas-lit fighting arena and colourful magic acts."

Entry fees at the gate are: Children under 13 years accompanied with an adult are free, $5 concession (all cards), student card and adults dressed in costume, $10 adult with a maximum charge of $25 for large families.

For more information, go to www.wama.asn.au
 


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Teen, 17, 'critical' after fall from vehicle

RESCUE DASH: The RAC rescue helicopter has been sent to Guilderton to airlift an injured motorist. Source: PerthNow

A 17-YEAR-old youth is in a critical condition in Royal Perth Hospital with head injuries after falling from a moving vehicle in Guilderton, 94km north of Perth.

It is believed the injured teenager had been drinking before the incident on Moore River Road near the intersection of Stephens Crescent and has suffered a seizure after the fall.

He was airlifted to Royal Perth by the RAC Rescue helicopter where he remains in a critical condition tonight.

A St Johns Ambulance spokesperson said the youth had been drifting in and out of consciousness at the scene.
 
The RAC helicopter was sent to the scene and landed at RPH just after 5pm..

Girl, 10, knocked down outside polling booth

A 10-year-old girl has been hit by a car in Maida Vale out the front of a polling booth.
 
The accident happened at the intersection of Kalamunda Road and Priory Road about 2.40pm.

 
St John Ambulance has taken the girl to Princess Margaret Hospital where she is in a stable condition.  


 


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

LANDSLIDE: Conqueror Colin Barnett takes four more years

JOYOUS: A beaming Premier Colin Barnett claims victory and thanks the WA voters and promises four more years of good government. Picture: Daniel Wilkins Source: PerthNow

VICTORIOUS WA Premier Colin Barnett has congratulated his successful MPs and promised "good government for another four years.''

Mr Barnett congratulated his coalition MPs who retained all the seats won at the last election.

``We've also won a further seven seats with a few still up for grabs,'' he told supporters.

He said the coalition deserved re-election as it had been a ``good government'', which was strong on the economy, ethical, principled and had introduced ``fantastic reforms in education and health.''

``This is the moment to enjoy,'' he said.

``And I promise you a good government for another four years.''

Mr Barnett congratulated Mr McGowan on his energetic campaign which he said gave the people of Western Australia a real choice.

GRACIOUS: Labor Leader Mark McGowan concedes defeat. Picture: Stewart Allen Source: PerthNow

Earlier, before 9pm -- less than three hours after polls closed -- Labor leader Mark McGowan conceded defeat after a crushing victory by the Liberal-National coalition, led by Mr Barnett.

At 8.50pm, Mr McGowan, who comfortably won his seat but saw his party decimated, said he had rung the Premier and congratulated him on his victory.

Mr McGowan said he was proud of the values that were reflected in his party's policies, which aimed to support West Australians in the regions as well as in the suburbs.

``I think we did a good job,'' he said.

``We went out there and we were bold in what we stood for.

``I know that we need to provide those basic core services, those basic facilities where people live in an expanding, growing state like Western Australia, and that was the vision we took to the election.

``That was what we wanted to make sure people understood that we stood for and that we strived to achieve in the course of this campaign.

``All of those ideas are ideas that we will pursue into the future.''

News Mark McGowan and wife Sarah voting at the Rockingham High School9.3.2013 Source: PerthNow

Labor had been courageous in putting out its ideas, he said, adding he was proud of the Metronet plan.

WA Labor's election campaign revolved around the Metronet train project but it was seen as an ambitious proposal and competed with the Liberal party's more piecemeal transport plans.

Federal Labor's sinking popularity and ailing image has dragged down the party's WA leader Mark McGowan, who was heading for a massive defeat in one of the state's most swiftly called elections.

Moments after counting began, ABC commentators said the polls that had pointed to a crushing victory to premier Colin Barnett and his the Liberal/Nationals coalition were proving correct and called the result about an hour into the tallying.

A brutally frank defence minister Stephen Smith said federal Labor had not helped Mr McGowan, who, despite a strong campaign, could not achieve an extremely rare defeat of a first term government.

Mr Smith said Saturday's result in the west proved the Labor party had many issues to work on before the federal election on September 14.

``We've had a tough time federally - you don't need to be a rocket scientist to work that out - and there's no doubt we have been a drag on Mark and there's no doubt that we haven't been helpful,'' Mr Smith said.

``We have a range of tough political issues to work through between now and September.

``It will go down to the wire.''

With 56.7 per cent of the vote counted, the coalition had 58 per cent of the vote on a two party preferred basis, with Labor taking 42 per cent, accounting for a swing of 6.6 per cent to the government.

Deputy federal opposition leader Julie Bishop said the WA election results - which very early in counting pointed to a Liberal/National coalition securing an overwhelming majority in the WA parliament - reflected poorly on Labor's brand.

Independent Liz Constable, who is retiring from the seat of Churchlands, said: ``I don't think anyone anticipated such a landslide''.

And WA Labor must have known it, with a very small contingent turning out for the party's gathering in Mr McGowan's home of Rockingham, where the atmosphere was decidedly sombre.

'WHAT A BLOODBATH' - LABOR MP

``It looks terrible. What a bloodbath,'' one Labor supporter lamented at the function.

Deputy leader of the Opposition Roger Cook admitted there had been some damage to the Labor brand from the federal government.

``To what extent it had a role to play in the state election is very difficult to say,'' he said.

WA Treasurer Troy Buswell, who had been attacked by the Labor party in the last week of the campaign, said the tactic had backfired.

``It's pretty un-Australian to play the man - I don't think West Australians have taken too kindly to that,'' Mr Buswell said.

HANNAH BEAZLEY MISSES OUT

Hannah Beazley, the daughter of former federal Labor leader Kim Beazley, looks highly unlikely to unseat sitting member for Riverton, Liberal member Mike Nahan.

The Swan Hills area, the focus of some of the key campaign issues including the Ellenbrook rail line and Perth-to-Darwin Highway, seems certain to remain firmly in the grip of Liberal Frank Alban.

Veteran Midland Labor MP Michelle Roberts and former Labor Transport Minister Alannah MacTiernan conceded early that the election was lost for Mark McGowan.

LIBERALS CELEBRATE EARLY

Pizzas by the hundreds were ordered, the balloons were standing proudly to attention, and the mood at the Sea View Golf Club in Colin Barnett's heartland of Cottesloe was a combination of New Year's Eve and a raucous 70th birthday party.

With the polls predicting a landslide, and the analysts saying similar within minutes after the polling booths closed, any Liberal nerves that may have existed on the morning of March 9 had dissipated long before the sun had set over the Indian Ocean.

The blue waves lapping against the nearby Cottesloe beach were being mirrored on the tally boards, as the seat of Churchlands fell first and many more followed.

Mr Barnett's advisers, who had spent the first weeks of the campaign playing catch-up to Mark McGowan's Metronet express, had the tired, relieved looks of those that would still have a job on Monday morning.

And when the numbers came through that there was an eight per cent swing toward Liberal enfant terrible Troy Buswell, who had become the target of Labor's bile in the final days of the campaign, the party really got started.

Mr Barnett had begun the day casting his vote next to a fellow constituent wearing his budgie smugglers.

As WA goes to vote, Premier Colin Barnett says he's confident he will be reelected and continue on as the state's leader.

And such was the astonishing tide of votes flowing the way of the Liberals, that the sight of a few of the more elderly supporters donning similar apparel running across the 18th green would not have been out of the question.

Balcatta, Kimberley, and then the seat of the Midland - parliamentary home of former Labor Police Minister Michelle Roberts - all swung violently, and the gasps of astonishment from the staunchest of Liberal supporters told the story.

Not only was Colin Barnett going to win, he was going to annihilate Labor, and secure himself a mandate to power ahead with his big vision for WA, while also sending a significant message to Prime Minister Julia Gillard, and a major boost to her September opponent Tony Abbott.


Take a graphical look at the entire state's seat-by-seat vote count so far, here.

SOMBRE MOOD AT LABOR HQ

By Angie Raphael
It was such a sombre mood among the WA Labor camp on election night that one of the only cheers from the crowd came when an image of the party's leader appeared on the television.

Less than 100 people gathered in Mark McGowan's electorate of Rockingham on Saturday night.

Heading into the state election, it looked like Labor was going to lose.

But no one expected political experts to begin calling the result before 7.30pm (WST).

``It looks terrible. What a bloodbath,'' one Labor supporter lamented.

Deputy leader of the Opposition Roger Cook was the only Labor politician to front the venue early in the evening and admitted to reporters that it was looking like a tough night ahead for his party.

``We need to just wait and see how the night develops,'' he said.

Mr Cook said there was still a sense of anticipation because it was early in the count.

He said there was a sense of pride in how the election campaign had been run by Labor.

``We believe we've run a very competitive campaign for a party that obviously doesn't have the resources to draw upon that the Liberal party does,'' he said.

``We've brought forward bold policies, bold visions for Western Australia.''
Mr Cook also admitted there had been some damage to the Labor brand from the federal government.

``To what extent it had a role to play in the state election is very difficult to say,'' he said.

They may be headed for a whitewash in the election, but at least there is plenty of good food to eat while Labor supporters drown their sorrows.

Mr Barnett maintained that at least a dozen seats hung in the balance, and that the Liberals would form another coalition with the Nationals even if the conservatives won the election outright.

Labor leader Mark McGowan, who holds the seat of the working-class suburb of Rockingham, said he'd run the best campaign he could have.

``You can't get down, you can't get distracted - you have to focus on what matters to the people in the community and not be deterred by whatever comes along,'' Mr McGowan said.

LEADERS CAMPAIGN TO LAST MINUTE

Both leaders spent the day visiting polling booths around the city in a bid to drum up last-minute support.

The WA Electoral Commission (WAEC) said voters surged to the polls early in the day, but a new computerised voter checking system at many centres kept waiting times to a minimum.

In the regions, WAEC staff in the Pilbara town of Karratha were stretched to their limit with the early turnout.

``We were hammered,'' local returning officer Jill Johnson said.

``And in all my time working on elections I have never seen so many party officials and volunteers working so hard to canvass people's votes.''

On top of the strong morning turnout, there was a 30 per cent increase in early voting, with 140,000 votes ready for tallying as soon as booths closed.

There were some light moments, including a raft of fancy-dressed superhero and fantasy fans who attended the Oz Comic-Con convention casting their votes in the Perth city polling place.

And a complete bridal party arrived at the Riverton district's Shelley Primary School centre before kicking on for festivities.

Deputy federal opposition leader Julie Bishop was full of praise for Mr Barnett, saying he would continue to stand up for the state's interests.

Ms Bishop said Mr McGowan had tried to distance himself from federal Labor, but that was futile because there was a deep distrust of the Gillard government that the state party couldn't shake.

Sportsbet called the election winner on Friday, almost 24 hours before polls opened.


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

McGowan weighed down by federal Labor

GRACIOUS: Labor Leader Mark McGowan condeded defeat before 9pm as seats toppled like dominoes. Picture: Ross Swanborough Source: PerthNow

AILING IMAGE: Mark McGowan's bid to become Premier of WA was weighed down by the stigma of federal Labor. Source: The Australian

FEDERAL Labor's sinking popularity and ailing image has dragged down the party's WA leader Mark McGowan, who is heading for a massive defeat in one of the state's most swiftly called elections.

Moments after counting began, ABC commentators said the polls that had pointed to a crushing victory to premier Colin Barnett and his the Liberal/Nationals coalition were proving correct and called the result about an hour into the tallying.

A brutally frank defence minister Stephen Smith said federal Labor had not helped Mr McGowan, who, despite a strong campaign, could not achieve an extremely rare defeat of a first term government.

Mr Smith said Saturday's result in the west proved the Labor party had many issues to work on before the federal election on September 14.

``We've had a tough time federally - you don't need to be a rocket scientist to work that out - and there's no doubt we have been a drag on Mark and there's no doubt that we haven't been helpful,'' Mr Smith said.


``We have a range of tough political issues to work through between now and September.

``It will go down to the wire.''

With 56.7 per cent of the vote counted, the coalition had 58 per cent of the vote on a two party preferred basis, with Labor taking 42 per cent, accounting for a swing of 6.6 per cent to the government.

Deputy federal opposition leader Julie Bishop said the WA election results - which very early in counting pointed to a Liberal/National coalition securing an overwhelming majority in the WA parliament - reflected poorly on Labor's brand.

Independent Liz Constable, who is retiring from the seat of Churchlands, said: ``I don't think anyone anticipated such a landslide''.

And WA Labor must have known it, with a very small contingent turning out for the party's gathering in Mr McGowan's home of Rockingham, where the atmosphere was decidedly sombre.

``It looks terrible. What a bloodbath,'' one Labor supporter lamented at the function.

Deputy leader of the Opposition Roger Cook admitted there had been some damage to the Labor brand from the federal government.

``To what extent it had a role to play in the state election is very difficult to say,'' he said.

WA Treasurer Troy Buswell, who had been attacked by the Labor party in the last week of the campaign, said the tactic had backfired.

``It's pretty un-Australian to play the man - I don't think West Australians have taken too kindly to that,'' Mr Buswell said.
 


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Stadium by 2017 - AFL stars back Libs' Burswood plan

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 08 Maret 2013 | 22.16

CAMPAIGN TRAIL: Colin Barnett at the site of the proposed Burswood stadium, flanked by Fremantle and West Coast mascots, and AFL stars Aaron Sandilands and Glen Jakovich. Picture: Colin Murty Source: PerthNow

PROMISE: Colin Barnett says the Liberals can deliver a new Burswood football stadium by 2017 - and has won support from AFL stars from both WA teams. Source: PerthNow

HANDBALL: Colin Barnett at Burswood today. Source: PerthNow

THE Liberals can deliver a new AFL stadium in Perth three years earlier than the opposition, Premier Colin Barnett says.

Mr Barnett last month said a stadium at his preferred site, next to James Packer's Crown Casino at Burswood, could be delivered by 2018.

But on election eve, he said the party was ``very confident'' it could deliver the new football venue in time for the finals in September 2017.

He's been consistent on how long he thinks Labor's Subiaco proposal will take, however, saying it won't get up before 2020.

On a bus tour of Perth with journalists today, Mr Barnett was joined at Burswood by West Coast Eagles player Andrew Embley and Aaron Sandilands from the Dockers, who backed the Liberal plan over Labor's proposal for Subiaco's Kitchener Park.

Former Eagle Glen Jakovich and ex-Fremantle player Peter Bell were also there, saying they also supported the Burswood concept.


The most heavyweight endorsement for the Liberal option, however, came last month from Eagles coach John Worsfold.

Perth's favourite footballing son said the stadium needed the capacity for expansion that was available at Burswood, whereas it appeared there were many space restrictions at Subiaco.

Mr Barnett said the Burswood site had enough room to expand to up to 80,000 seats, from an initial 60,000 seats.
In identifying savings to fund its ambitious Metronet rail project, Labor said its stadium plan was $300 million cheaper.


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Leaders poles apart and apart in polls

GREAT DIVIDE: WA Premier Colin Barnett shakes hands with Mark McGowan in a pre-election televised debate. Picture: Jordan Shields Source: News Limited

THERE could not be a clearer choice for West Australian voters when they stroll to the polls tomorrow.

On the Liberal side is Premier Colin Barnett - aged 62, resident of affluent, beachside Cottesloe, and friend of big industry, big-picture projects and the big future he says Asia will bring for Australia's biggest state.

For Labor it's opposition leader Mark McGowan - aged 45, MP for WA's "bogan capital" of Rockingham, and a left-leaning lover of public transport, public utilities and public displays of affection with his family.

Delivering their policy spiels during more than a month on the hustings, they have opened up gaps between the left and right of WA politics that have rarely been wider.

The Liberals say they will build a new stadium at Burswood, finish Perth's waterside development, impose more mandatory sentences on criminals and construct a tramline to battle Perth's congestion.


Labor says it will move the new AFL stadium back to Subiaco, renegotiate the Elizabeth Quay waterside project, create a new panel to judge WA's judges and build a multi-billion dollar Metronet train system to free Perth from rush-hour hell.

The map of Metronet, a multi-coloured spider web of new train lines from Yanchep in the north to Mandurah in the south, is the abiding image of WA's 2013 election campaign.

It set the agenda as WA Labor got off to a flying start, with the Metronet plans launched weeks before the Liberals even conceded the campaign was under way.

And the back-and-forth over how much the ambitious integrated rail system would cost, and who would cost it, quickly drowned out much of the rest of the campaign - including what was to be increasingly vitriolic sniping between the big two on social media.

Former WA Liberal leader Matt Birney said the high-speed media cycle meant very little time was spent on individual policy announcements - apart from Metronet.

"I am surprised the environment did not feature a bit larger, and a lot of the policy initiatives have not received successive media. They get their announcement that day ... and then they go away," Mr Birney said.

"We haven't seen that (successive media) except for Metronet and that died a natural death when the costings came out."

Those treasury costings caused much angst for Labor, which kept the gathered media waiting nearly two hours before admitting its $3.8 billion estimate had come up short by $1.4 billion in 2021 prices - or $535 million in 2012 dollars.

Fears were also raised about the safety and reliability of the plan.

Metronet was renamed "Metronot" by Treasurer Troy "The Boy" Buswell, who, along with the health and age of premier Colin Barnett, then became the focus of the final few days before polling.

Somewhat ironically, after spending most of the campaign talking up his vision of running trains around and across Perth, Mr McGowan spent the final days on a bus, talking to people in more than 20 regional and city electorates in just four days.

And in the final push, Mr McGowan claimed that Mr Buswell - famed for his previous bra-snapping, chair-sniffing, frat-boy antics - was being groomed to take over as premier post-election, with Mr Barnett also rumoured to be feeling his age and suffering ill health.

Strong denials from Mr Barnett and Mr Buswell - who said he would "never, ever" lead the Liberals again - did not convince all.

Former Labor attorney-general Jim McGinty commented: "I believe Colin Barnett will not serve out the next term for a simple reason. He is looking tired. He is looking jaded in my view.

"You always want to have some sort of succession plan in place, and the Liberal Party love Troy Buswell - they see him as a flawed genius, the rest of us just seem his as flawed."

The public polls and the bookmakers have said from the start they believe result will be clear, with punters being offered a paltry $1.01 for a Liberal win, and whopping $14 odds for a Labor upset.

Mr Barnett has always said the result will be much tighter, with the minority Liberal government needing to gain six seats to claim power in its own right, and Labor needing just three.

But with pundits predicting a swing to the Liberals of up to five per cent, expectations of who will win leading into Saturday are unquestionable - as are the differences between the men who want to lead Australia's boom state for the next four years.

What do you think? Are the bookies right?


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Big Day Out death ruled 'accidental'

Gemma Thoms (right) with her mother Peta. Gemma died after taking ecstasy tablets at the 2009 Big Day Out in Perth. Pic. Supplied Source: PerthNow

INADEQUATE medical facilities at the 2009 Big Day Out festival in Perth contributed to the death of a teenager who took three ecstasy tablets after panicking that she would be caught with them, a coroner has ruled.

Gemma Thoms was just 17 when she collapsed at the festival, having earlier told paramedics that she had only taken "dexi'' - a slang term for dexedrine - and lied to paramedics that she was 18.

After being allowed to return to the festival, Ms Thoms had to be rushed to hospital soon after, but coroner Dominic Mulligan said her organs had effectively been "cooked'' before she got there.

"Ms Thoms did not know that after she swallowed the third tablet she had just consumed a fatal quantity of ecstasy, which in the context of a very hot day, would inexorably lead to her death unless she was extremely lucky,'' Mr Mulligan said.

Ruling Ms Thoms' death as accidental, Mr Mulligan said although medical services were within guidelines at the time of the 2009 festival, they were "inadequate'' to deal with a major medical emergency.

Guidelines and facilities have been upgraded since, with the coroner visiting this year's festival and saying the medical facilities were now in excess of what was required.

Mr Mulligan said the WA Health Department should revise guidelines to make sure similar events had the same level of medical resources as this year's Big Day Out.

Peta Davies, Ms Thoms' mother, said she was proud that improvements had been made to the festival's medical infrastructure after her daughter's death.

"I'm really proud of her (Gemma). I love her. She made a terrible mistake but I couldn't ask for anything better to come out of this situation,'' Mrs Davies said.


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Top office rivals tweet up a storm

SOCIAL media has become a major battleground for the WA election, with Labor describing Premier Colin Barnett's bus trip as a perfect metaphor for his reign - "all ego, spin and stolen ideas".

Opposition transport spokesman Ken Travers has been tweeting up a storm, taking a swipe at the Liberal leader on Friday about his bus tour of marginal suburban seats, taking him to working class suburbs such as Midland on election eve.

"If Barnett thinks Mirrabooka and Scarborough are the suburbs, it's no wonder Ellenbrook busway and Yanchep rail are now ghost trains," Mr Travers wrote.

"Will they take the Barnett bus on a tour of the Ellenbrook busway? Not in this decade!"

He also crowed about Labor's transport achievements seen aboard Opposition Leader Mark McGowan's bus.

"McGowan bus passes train at Whitford turn back. Line built by WA Labor and train purchase by WA Labor."


Mr Travers also admitted he was one of those who said Mr Barnett was "tired", sparking speculation this week that the Premier would not serve a full second term if re-elected.

"I said he was looking tired in answer to a question. Tired as in ideas and not enjoying job."

While polls and bookies say the Liberal party is set for a landslide win on Saturday, Labor has won the social media war if sheer volume is anything to go by.

Mr Travers is not the only politician to tweet a few barbs for opponents, with Liberal federal director Brian Loughnane writing: "Labor's a mess. Don't let them mess with WA. Secure WA's future. Vote Liberals WA".

Another Liberals WA tweet read: "Exciting news! Julia Gillard is finally coming to WA! Three weeks after the election", referring to her absence from Mr McGowan's side during the campaign.


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Sally Ayhan's latest weather update

GET the latest on what the weather's been doing today, plus the forecast for the next 24 hours and week ahead, with Channel 9's weather presenter Sally Ayhan.

Channel Nine's new weather presenter Sally Ayhan gives PerthNow readers a unique insight into what's been happening with the local weather and a sneak peek into what temperatures to expect over the next 24 hours.
 
For Sally's full weather report, including the 7-day forecast, make sure you tune in to Nine News at 6pm tonight.
 


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger