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Stormy weather moves through Vic

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 15 Maret 2014 | 18.16

STORMS have swept through Victoria, bringing down trees and causing damage to homes.

The Bureau of Meteorology issued a severe thunderstorm alert on Saturday, warning that damaging winds, heavy rainfall and large hailstones were likely to affect parts of the state.

The State Emergency Service said so far 80 calls for assistance had been received, mainly from greater metropolitan Melbourne, and coastal areas such as Chelsea and Frankston.

Residents in state's northeast and northwest have also contacted emergency services.

Many of the calls relate to fallen trees and roof tiles coming away from residential properties, causing minor leaks and flood damage to homes, the SES said.

Bureau of Meteorology duty forecaster Stephen King said Saturday evening's storm activity would extend up from the metropolitan area up through central Victoria towards Bendigo and Echuca.

The bureau's severe thunderstorm warning currently applies to Northern Country, North Central, North East, West and South Gippsland and parts of the Central and East Gippsland.

An earlier severe thunderstorm warning for Melbourne has now been cancelled as the immediate threat has passed.


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SA election still too close to call

About one million people are set to cast their ballots to decide the next state government of SA. Source: AAP

THE South Australian election is neck and neck with almost a quarter of the vote counted, as swings varied widely across the state.

The early results had both Labor and Liberals winning 19 seats each in the 47-seat parliament with two others also likely to remain in the hands of independents.

That left seven in doubt with opposition leading in several of those but Labor looking set to win the inner suburban seat of Adelaide from the Liberals.

On the primary statewide vote the swing to the opposition was three per cent with the swing away from Labor 1.6 per cent.

Going into the election the Liberals needed to pick up six seats to govern in their own right or at least three to have any chance of forming a minority government.

Labor held six of its seats on a margin of 2.7 per cent or less.

Despite the result remaining in doubt, Labor looks set to lose a number of ministers even if they can hang onto government.

Transport Services Minister Chloe Fox in Bright and Employment Minister Grace Portolesi in Hartley were both in trouble while Manufacturing Minister Tom Kenyon was behind early but could hang on.

Labor was also trailing in a number of other seats including the seat of Ashford, but was leading in Elder where the Liberals accused the government of a racist slur against their candidate Carolyn Habib by distributing a pamphlet which just featured her surname on the cover.

Earlier today Premier Jay Weatherill said he expected the result to be close with the election to be decided in a number of key seats.

"Obviously there are a range of seats that are going to be battleground seats. A large number of them this time," he said.

With the count so close a hung parliament also remained on the cards.

Mr Weatherill said he was focussed on winning a majority of seats, while Liberal leader Steven Marshall said the opposition had not ruled out forming a minority government.

"I've never ruled that out but I do say that it would be great for a government to govern in their own right here in South Australia," Mr Marshall said.

Just over 1.1 million South Australians were enrolled to vote.

About 70,000 of those cast their ballots early at voting centres across the state with about 86,000 people also expected to lodge postal votes.

Those votes could ultimately prove crucial.


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China eases exchange rate controls

Roosters thrash hapless Eels

Roosters v Eels

THE Roosters have thrashed the Eels by 52 points with more bad news likely with Darcy Lussick certain to be cited for a swinging arm.

Old folks' mild superpower revealed

 Senior Man Wearing a Flat Cap Standing With His Arms Crossed. Elderly man, aged care. Generic, Thinkstock

AS superpowers go, it's not the most amazing. But a new study shows that the elderly have a skill that many younger mortals lack. Can you guess what it is?

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Most popular suburbs in Australia

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Indigenous concerned about Cape York plan

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 14 Maret 2014 | 18.16

TRADITIONAL owners on Queensland's Cape York say they need more time to consider the government's 20-year plan for the peninsula.

About 10 indigenous groups say they want the March 25 deadline for submissions on the Cape York regional plan extended because of the significance of the plan.

The draft, released in November, outlines future land use for the region - mapping areas where development may be considered and areas of high environmental value.

Laura traditional owner Desmond Tayley says indigenous land owners, who will be affected most by the land use changes, weren't consulted before the draft was drawn up.

"This could be one of the biggest plans that affects how we do business on Cape York," he told AAP on Friday.

"The cultural heritage aspects are not really recognised in this plan ... the traditional owners and land owners have never really been consulted."

Mr Tayley says although the government spoke with Cape York councils, this didn't necessarily mean traditional owners were consulted.

He also wants similar protections offered to the Steve Irwin Wildlife Reserve, where mining has been banned, extended to include rock art sites in and around Laura.

Traditional owners from Western Yalanji, Mapoon, Pormpuraaw, Archer Point, Olkola, Lockhardt River, Chuula, Batavia Downs and the Wenlock Catchment Group have also expressed concern.

Deputy Premier Jeff Seeney says the draft plan was developed in close consultation with traditional owners and discussions will extend beyond the official March 25 deadline.

"The Queensland government is prepared to take as long as is necessary to get this plan right," he said in a statement.

"I can reassure communities on the Cape that all their submissions and comments will be considered in finalisation of the plan."

The 28 members of the Cape York Regional Planning Committee includes MPs, mayors, green groups and resource sector representatives.

The government has said the plan encourages economic growth, while green groups say it opens up vast areas of the cape to mining.


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Gorgon could be delayed until 2016

AUSTRALIA'S largest gas project Gorgon could be delayed until at least 2016 as joint venture partners Chevron and Shell differ on the expected start-up date.

It follows a series of delays and cost blowouts to the massive $US54 billion ($A60.02 billion) liquefied natural gas (LNG) project in north Western Australia.

Shell chief executive Ben Van Beurden presented a table to analysts overnight showing the estimated start-up date for the massive 450 million ton project had been pushed back to between 2016 to 2018.

Shell's presentation in London contradicts lead partner's Chevron's assurances that the project is on track to begin in mid-2015.

Chevron this week reiterated its start-up date for first gas next year.

In December last year, Chevron pushed back the time-frame from the first quarter of 2015 and announced the cost of the project had blown out by $US2 billion to $US54 billion.

A spokeswoman for Royal Dutch Shell, which has a 25 per cent stake in Gorgon, referred questions about the start-up time to Chevron.

The original budgeted cost of Gorgon was $US37 billion when it was given the green light in 2009.

Earlier this week, Chevron said Gorgon was almost 80 per cent complete, with two thirds of the gas already committed to buyers.

Offshore pipelaying was now complete and 65 per cent of the LNG from Gorgon had been committed under long-term contracts.

Mr Beurden also reaffirmed the company's $US15 billion target for asset sales over 2014-15 but made no mention of whether it would include a sell down of its stake in Perth-based Woodside Petroleum.

Royal Dutch Shell, a joint venture partner in Woodside's Browse project in Western Australia, has previously indicated it will begin an asset sales program.

Analysts predict Shell could reap $US6.95 ($A7.82) billion by selling its 23.1 per cent interest in Woodside.

Mr Beurden said the company had already announced more than $US4.5 billion of asset sales, including equity in the Wheatstone LNG stake and downstream businesses in Australia.

"There are more divestments to come reaching an expected $US15 billion for 2014 and 2015 combined," Mr Beurden told analysts.

Shell also said start-up for its 110 million ton Prelude floating LNG project would be between 2016 2018.


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Sydney man's alleged killer to front court

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 13 Maret 2014 | 18.16

Sydney real estate agent, Vissa Esan, 48, has been stabbed to death on the way to work. Source: AAP

A MAN has been charged over the alleged stabbing murder of Sydney real estate agent Vissa Esan.

Police say the 47-year-old Aussie Unity Real Estate owner was confronted inside his Pendle Hills office about 7.45am (AEDT) on Thursday.

It's alleged Mr Esan, whose wife is expecting their first baby, was knifed in the chest.

He was rushed to Westmead Hospital but died a short time later.

A 33-year-old was arrested nearby and has now been charged with murder.

The man was refused bail to appear in Fairfield Local Court on Friday.

A large crowd of local business people, residents and Mr Esan's distraught colleagues gathered near the crime scene on Thursday.

They said the Sri Lankan-born businessman migrated to Australia about 20 years ago and lived in Kellyville.


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AFP drops Corby interview investigation

THE Australian Federal Police have dropped a proceeds of crime investigation into Schapelle Corby.

Federal officers raided Seven Network offices in Sydney last month amid intense speculation the network was working on a deal with the convicted drug runner for a lucrative first interview following her release from an Indonesian jail.

Under proceeds of crime legislation, convicted criminals can't benefit financially from their notoriety.

On Thursday evening the AFP announced it was dropping the investigation altogether and would hand back all seized documents.

"In recent weeks, Indonesian authorities have clearly outlined that any such interview would be in breach of Ms Corby's parole conditions and could result in her parole being revoked," the AFP said.

"Any possibility of an agreement has now been superseded by these additional parole conditions.

"This decision does not mean that the original concerns that initiated the investigation were not well founded."

The backdown comes weeks after AFP assistant commissioner Michael Phelan was forced to apologise over a mistake in the warrants executed on Seven, which suggested they related to a criminal rather than civil matter.

Corby, 36, spent more than nine years in jail in Bali after being found guilty of importing marijuana.

Seven has launched legal action against the AFP over the raids.


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Murdoch among TV Hall of Fame inductees

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 12 Maret 2014 | 18.16

RUPERT Murdoch has been inducted into the US Television Academy Hall of Fame in a ceremony in California.

Murdoch noted that the ceremony fell on his 83rd birthday, which he called an annoyance: "As you well know, I'm not fond of looking back," he said.

The chairman of News Corporation and 21st Century Fox did offer reflections on his career, which he said has focused on providing consumers with more choices and taking the risks needed to do so - such as starting the Fox network in 1986 to compete with the big three broadcasters.

Murdoch, whose media empire was recently shaken by a phone hacking scandal, also created the Fox News network which has taken over from rivals CNN and MSNBC as the highest-rating news network.

It often stirs controversy for its staunch opinion-driven journalism.

Also being inducted into the Hall of Fame was Jay Leno, the recently retired host of one of America's longest-running TV institutions, The Tonight Show.

Leno was inducted by fellow comic and TV host Bill Maher, who offered a spirited attack on what he called Leno's undeserved "bad publicity".

Maher said Leno's behaviour never warranted the brickbats tossed at him over Conan O'Brien's short-lived tenure as Tonight Show host in late 2009 and early 2010.

"Jay Leno reminds me a little bit of Israel," Maher said. "He's not perfect, but he's held to a standard nobody is expected to live up to but him."

He said the media helped fan the myth that Leno "stole Conan's dream" when NBC brought Leno back to host The Tonight Show after the show's ratings dropped with O'Brien at the helm.

In his acceptance speech, Leno, 63, said it was the right time to turn The Tonight Show over to the younger Jimmy Fallon, who is 39.

Leno said he watches Fallon's show, and the two talk a couple of times a week.

"He's terrific. He brings a new energy," Leno said before the ceremony. "I think he was smart to take it to New York, get a different vibe or different feel."

The other inductees included Seinfeld star Julia Louis-Dreyfus and prolific writer-producer David E Kelley, the creator of Boston Legal, The Practice and Ally McBeal.

Louis-Dreyfus, the Emmy-winning star of Seinfeld, The New Adventures of Old Christine and Veep, was saluted by friend Amy Poehler as "the best one on Seinfeld and always the funniest in a room."

Louis-Dreyfus shared advice she learned from her physics high school teacher: "Have fun at all costs," she said.


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Facebook, BBC top British websites poll

New research has revealed Facebook and the BBC are the top two most popular websites in the UK. Source: AAP

THE two websites Britain cannot live without are the BBC and social networking site Facebook, new research has found.

The top five websites were revealed to be Facebook (24 per cent), BBC (20 per cent), Amazon (nine per cent), Gmail (five per cent) and Yahoo (five per cent), in a poll for Nominet, the company that runs the .uk internet infrastructure.

Facebook was chosen by 32 per cent of women, while for men (26 per cent) the BBC website was in the number one position.

Almost half of those quizzed (46 per cent) said the best thing about the web was finding quick answers to questions, while a quarter (25 per cent) said that what they liked the most was finding old friends.

A further quarter of people (24 per cent) said that they used the web most to help with something that was a cause of worry.

For young people aged 18 to 24, the search for a job was higher up the list - with 28 per cent of them citing "finding a job" as the best thing the web has given them.

The survey of 2001 adults was commissioned to celebrate the web's birthday on Wednesday, marking 25 years since Sir Tim Berners-Lee published the paper that served as the blueprint for the modern web.

"The web is such an integral part of everyday life that we simply can't live without it," said Lesley Cowley, chief executive of Nominet.

"It has changed to something beyond what even Sir Tim and his colleagues could have imagined 25 years ago, when they were looking for an easier way to share and structure information.

"The social, political and economic impact of the web makes it a story we are all part of, and to which we all contribute daily, whether that's finding the answer to a question or connecting with friends and colleagues."


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Shark fight continues despite EPA ruling

CONSERVATIONISTS have vowed to continue the fight against Western Australia's shark kill policy, despite being dealt another blow in a bid to end the so-called cull.

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Japan marks 3rd anniversary of disaster

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 11 Maret 2014 | 18.16

Japan has observed a moment of silence in Japan to mark the third anniversary of the quake-tsunami. Source: AAP

JAPAN has observed a moment of silence to mark the third anniversary of the quake-tsunami disaster which swept away thousands of victims, destroyed coastal communities, and sparked the nuclear emergency that forced a re-think on atomic power.

Survivors bowed deeply at remembrance ceremonies in towns and cities around the disaster zone and in Tokyo, where Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko led tributes to those who died in Japan's worst peace-time disaster.

A national moment of silence followed the cry of tsunami alarm sirens which were set off at 2:46pm, the moment a 9.0-magnitude undersea quake hit.

Its raw force unleashed a towering wall of water that travelled at the speed of a jet plane to the coast. Within minutes, communities were turned to matchwood, and whole families drowned.

Giant waves also crashed into the Fukushima nuclear plant, sparking reactor meltdowns and explosions, and setting off the worst atomic crisis in a generation.

The crippled plant remains volatile and the complicated decommissioning process is expected to last for decades, as fears persist over the health effects of leaked radiation. Tens of thousands were evacuated from the stricken area.

Emperor Akihito paid tribute to victims killed in the tragedy, and those struggling in its aftermath.

"Many victims still lead difficult lives in devastated areas and places that were evacuated," he said from a national theatre hall in downtown Tokyo.

"It is important for all people to join together and show their support in the long-term... I pray for a return of peaceful times to devastated areas."

Although no one died as a direct result of Fukushima, about 1,650 area residents passed away from complications related to stress and other problems following the accident.

A total of 15,884 people are confirmed to have died in the tsunami with another 2,633 still listed as missing. Human remains are sometimes still found years later.

In the shattered town of Namie, just eight kilometres from the stricken plant, about 200 former residents, police and firefighters gathered to search for remains.

They raked a beach where broken timber and cars pulled by the waves once lay half buried.

"Our parents are still missing," said 25-year-old former resident Miho Suzuki, joined by her sister.

"I don't think we'll ever find them, but we came here to take part because we felt like doing something to help."

For another former Namie resident, Morihisa Kadoya, returning to a town that remains uninhabitable due to health concerns seems like a distant dream.

"It's impossible to come back - the decommissioning at the plant is going to take years," he said.

Despite the government pledging billions of dollars in reconstruction aid, progress in disaster-hit regions has been slow, and thousands of disaster refugees struggle to cope.

Among almost 270,000 evacuees from the tsunami and Fukushima, about 100,000 are in temporary housing while others found shelter in new cities or with relatives.

Japan has so far built only 3.5 per cent of the new homes promised to disaster refugees in heavily affected Iwate and Miyagi prefectures.

And doubts are growing. Some 77 per cent of Japanese say the pace of reconstruction has fallen short, according to a poll by Japanese media this month.

"I'm determined to accelerate the recovery and not let this disaster fade from memory," Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told parliament Monday.

"Japan's revival won't come without the restoration of devastated areas."


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Man with stolen passport was asylum seeker

A man travelling on the missing Malaysia Airlines jet with a stolen passport was an asylum seeker. Source: AAP

A MAN travelling with a stolen passport on a missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner was an Iranian teenager trying to migrate to Germany, and is not believed to have any terrorist links, police say.

The announcement is likely to dampen, at least for now, speculation that the disappearance of the Boeing 777 was linked to terrorism. Police said a second passenger also travelling with a stolen passport has not been identified. Both bought their tickets in Thailand and entered Malaysia together.

No debris from the plane has been found. On Tuesday, baffled authorities expanded their search to the opposite side of Malaysia from where it disappeared more than three days ago with 239 people on board.

The airline says the pilots did not send any distress signals, suggesting a sudden and possibly catastrophic incident. Speculation has ranged widely about possible causes, including pilot error, plane malfunction, hijacking and terrorism.

News that two of the passengers were travelling with stolen passports immediately fuelled speculation of foul play. However, Malaysian police chief Khalid Abu Bakar told a news conference Tuesday that investigators had determined one was a 19-year-old Iranian, Pouria Nourmohammadi Mehrdad, who was planning to enter Germany to seek asylum.

"We believe he is not likely to be a member of any terrorist group," Khalid said.

He said the young man's mother was waiting for him in Frankfurt and had been in contact with police. He said she contacted Malaysian authorities to inform them of her concern when her son didn't get in touch with her.

He also said there was no truth to a statement by at least one other government official that five passengers had checked in for the flight but never boarded the aeroplane.

The plane took off from Kuala Lumpur, on the western coast of Malaysia, early Saturday en route to Beijing. It flew across Malaysia into the Gulf of Thailand at 11,000 metres and then disappeared from radar screens.

Authorities have said the plane may have attempted to turn back toward Kuala Lumpur.

The hunt began on Saturday near the plane's last known location. But with no debris found there, the search has been systematically expanded to include areas the plane could have reached with the fuel it had on board. That is a vast area in which to locate something as small as a piece of an aircraft.

Malaysia Airlines said search and rescue teams have expanded the scope beyond the flight path to the Straits of Malacca between Malaysia's western coast and Indonesia's Sumatra island - the opposite side of Malaysia from its last known location.

An earlier statement said the western coast of Malaysia was "now the focus," but the airline subsequently said that phrase was an oversight.


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Tattoo key to saving abused boy

Written By Unknown on Senin, 10 Maret 2014 | 18.16

A LITTLE boy adopted by a pedophilic Queensland couple and farmed out to an international ring of sex abusers was rescued thanks to a distinctive temporary tattoo, investigators have revealed.

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Inquiry told Pell backs right to sue

A NSW hearing will examine the response of the Catholic Church to John Ellis's claim of child abuse. Source: AAP

AUSTRALIA'S most senior Catholic Cardinal George Pell believes victims of child sex abuse should be able to sue the church.

Revealed at a hearing of the federal Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney on Monday, Cardinal Pell's position represents a major policy change from the church.

The commission is examining the experiences of victim John Ellis who unsuccessfully pursued civil litigation against the church and Cardinal Pell for the abuse he suffered while an altar boy.

It's been told the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney spent $1.5 million to defeat Mr Ellis' $100,000 claim stemming from the hurt and distress he suffered at the hands of Father Aidan Duggan at Christ the King's Church in Bass Hill, Sydney from 1974 to 1979.

He lost his case when the court ruled the church was not a legal entity which could be sued and Cardinal Pell could not be held responsible.

The case has been viewed as a barrier to future compensation attempts.

In her opening remarks to the commission on Monday, Gail Furness SC, counsel advising the commission, outlined Mr Ellis' costly fight.

She said when Cardinal Pell gives evidence later in the hearings he will say that, on reflection, some of the steps in Mr Ellis' case caused him concern.

In his submission to the royal commission, she went on, Cardinal Pell will say: "Whatever position was taken by the lawyers during the litigation, or by lawyers of individuals within the Archdiocese following the litigation, my own view is that the church in Australia should be able to be sued in cases of this kind."

Mr Ellis lost his action in 2005 and the church and its solicitors pursued him for more than $550,000 costs for three years, before they were finally waived.

Ms Furness said Mr Ellis, a lawyer, was first told his claim could not be resolved because the alleged abuser, Fr Duggan, had dementia.

Before any mediation began he was informed by Raymond Brazil, a facilitator for the church's Professional Standards Office (NSW/ACT) that any "financial gesture would be in the form of a gratuity and not compensation in the legal sense".

There was a cap of $50,000 and only the most serious cases receive the maximum amount.

The commission has heard the church's Towards Healing program which is meant to be compassionate and pastoral in its approach does not have a financial cap on redress.

Mr Ellis told the inquiry the impacts of the abuse were still unfolding for him and his wife Nicola at the time.

He had been asked to resign from his position as partner in the law firm Baker and McKenzie and in the initial stages of therapy, was living away from home.

He requested $100,000 but was offered $25,000.

The offer was upped to $30,000 and he considered accepting this because he was financially strapped.

Mr Ellis said he was told the offer was less than he wanted because: "The impact on you is considered to be less because the abuse continued after you were 18."

He was also told the church authority questioned the casual links between his present issues and the abuse.

"I felt the impacts on me were being minimised in that response", Mr Ellis said.

He told the commission: "I had no desire to engage in legal proceedings against the church.

What he wanted was a payment of something like the suggested $100,000, an apology from the Cardinal, acknowledgment of the church's failure to protect him and counselling.

He also wanted honest information about how Father Duggan had come to be placed at Bass Hill.


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Aust ready to do more for Malaysia: Bishop

CANBERRA will do more to help search for a missing Malaysia Airlines plane if Kuala Lumpur needs additional assistance, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has said after speaking with her Malaysian counterpart.

The Australian minister also flagged the need for tighter passport controls.

Malaysia has dispatched ships to investigate the sighting of a floating object that could be a life raft, as it continues to hunt for the missing airliner.

The plane's disappearance has led to an international search and rescue operation with Australia sending two P-3C Orion RAAF aircraft.

"It does show that countries pull together when there is a crisis such as this," Ms Bishop told reporters in London where she's attending the annual Australia-UK Ministerial Consultations (AUKMIN) meeting.

"I spoke to the Malaysian foreign minister Anifah (Aman) yesterday and offered him our support.

"I asked that if there was anything further that Australia could do they just have to let us know."

Ms Bishop said it was a very distressing time for the families of passengers and crew on the flight.

"We can assume that it has gone down but we don't know where or why."

Six Australians and two New Zealanders are among 239 people feared dead aboard the Kuala Lumpur to Beijing flight.

A terrorism investigation is underway amid revelations two passengers travelled on false passports.

Asked if Australian airports regularly scanned passports against the Interpol database of stolen documents, the foreign minister said: "I believe so."

"We would like to think that our passport system is exceedingly robust," Ms Bishop said.

"But this is an incident that is not isolated and the response from Interpol, for example, indicates that much tighter scrutiny may well be required."


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Lost Aussie found with amnesia in Cambodia

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 09 Maret 2014 | 18.16

AN Australian man who went missing in Thailand more than a month ago has been found across the border, reportedly suffering from memory loss.

Financial consultant Nathan Hansford had last been seen leaving his home in the Bangkok suburb of Thungkru on January 31, prompting Thai police to launch an investigation last week.

Late on Sunday, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) confirmed Mr Hansford had been located in Cambodia.

"Consular officials in Cambodia are in contact with Mr Hansford's family," a DFAT spokeswoman told AAP.

A family statement released to Fairfax Media said Mr Hansford had been involved in a motor vehicle accident and was suffering from amnesia.

"It is time for us to focus on helping Nathan in his recovery," the statement said.


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Thoughts with those on Malaysia flight: PM

PM Tony Abbott says Australians' thoughts are with the families of those on a missing Malaysia jet. Source: AAP

PRIME Minister Tony Abbott says Australians' thoughts are with the passengers and families of those on a missing China-bound Malaysia Airlines jet.

Queensland couples Catherine and Robert Lawton and Mary and Rodney Burrows, and Sydneysiders Li Yuan and Gu Naijun, are among 239 people on board flight MH370, which disappeared between Malaysia's east coast and southern Vietnam.

Mr Abbott on Sunday described the tragedy as a "horrible, horrible business".

"Our thoughts and prayers are with the passengers and their families on that ill-fated aircraft, particularly to the six Australian passengers and their families, that have now been confirmed to be on board," he told reporters in Adelaide.

"We're looking at ways in which we can help with the search and recovery operation."

Opposition leader Bill Shorten echoed Mr Abbott's comments.

"I believe the Australian nation's thoughts go out to the families of those Australians and New Zealanders that are on this plane, and indeed the families of everyone," he told reporters in Melbourne.


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Wife prays for miracle for missing husband

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