Fears mount for Kiwi missing in US

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The family of a New Zealand man missing in the United States are fearing the worst as a week has gone by without any clues to his disappearance.

Father-of-two Peter O’Brien, 44, has been missing from his home in Boise, Idaho, since last Thursday, when his ex-wife Suzanne Oppenheimer last saw him. .
Ms Oppenheimer said she expected Mr O’Brien to pick up his five and six-year-old sons on Saturday and went round to his place when he did not show up.
Ms Oppenheimer said today both ground and aerial search teams had turned up nothing in a wilderness area close to Mr O’Brien’s home. His car was parked in the drive.
Detectives are now checking bank records and security footage at close toby airports in order to establish if he may have travelled within the United States.
Police don’t believe Mr O’Brien has left the country as his passport has not been used.
“I’m just worried something bad has happened.
Ms Oppenheimer said she had no particular fears about the Mr O’Brien’s mental state before he disappeared but that their relationship was strained.
“The police don’t think he was abducted. I don’t think anything good (has) happened.”
Ms Oppenheimer said police had not yet discussed with her any plans to call off the search. They think perhaps he has killed himself.
His brother and one of his sisters have flown to the US to help with the inquiry.
Mr O’Brien, who was originally from Wellington, had been living in the US since 2000 after making a move from Australia.

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Epic trek for survival

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A badly injured tramper lay in the Southern Alps for more than a week before taking two days to haul himself down a glacier in a desperate bid for survival.

With only Little Dog, his border collie-huntaway cross, for company, extreme alpine tramper Matthew Briggs, 34, spent 12 days in the country’s most unforgiving terrain with severe injuries and dwindling rations after falling down a five-metre bluff on March 20.

Searchers found Mr Briggs only after he dragged himself to a hut.

The Briton was rescued by helicopter yesterday, and despite bone-deep cuts to his back and buttocks, a suspected broken ankle and wrist, the hardy tramper refused pain relief and offered his rescuers a cup of tea.

After being picked up at first light, Mr Briggs was flown to Grey Hospital in Greymouth where he had surgery. Two hunters then tramped for 13 hours on Monday to raise the alarm.

Mr Briggs left Middlemarch about March 16, parking his van near the Huxley River in South Canterbury.

Despite his tale of endurance, Mr Briggs was criticised for wasting police time and risking his life by not leaving crucial details about his trip. But he fell near the Douglas Glacier, he told Stu Drake, a paramedic on the Solid Energy rescue helicopter. .

Though the hut was only a few kilometres away, Mr Briggs made camp and waited for more than a week for friends to raise the alarm. He then faced an “epic [vertical] descent” of about a kilometre in “absolute tiger country” to reach the shelter of Horace Walker Hut. So he thought, ‘If I don’t get myself out of here, I’m going to die here.

“Two days into the panic button time, nothing had happened.

Barry Sharplin, 21, one of the two hunters, said Mr Briggs arrived looking “a bit worse for wear”.”‘

He spent the next two days hobbling down the steep slope to the hut, where he found the hunters and much-needed food before his rescue, Mr Drake said. “He was better than I would have been in that situation.

Despite his ordeal, Briggs was lucid and able to describe what happened.

“He landed on some rocks. He handled himself pretty well,” said Sharplin.. He said he cut his leg pretty bad and there was just a crimson river below him .

“He said it had taken him two days to walk 3km..”

Mr Sharplin said Mr Briggs told them he had hobbled, crawled and slid his way to the hut, rationing the rice and other food he had, and stopping at night to bathe his wounds in a mixture of salt and water.”

Mr Sharplin said Mr Briggs told them he had hobbled, crawled and slid his way to the hut, rationing the rice and other food he had, and stopping at night to bathe his wounds in a mixture of salt and water.

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“He was really having to ration his food, I think he only had about one day left to go,” Mr Sharplin said.

When paramedics assessed him, they found injuries that would have seen other people “lying on the ground”.

“He refused pain relief. We carry morphine, but he was just happy to get out of there. He was an extremely capable and tough sort of character,” Mr Drake said.

Briggs had been helicoptered to Grey Base Hospital where he underwent surgery yesterday afternoon.

Yesterday, Sharplin took Little Dog, a border collie-huntaway cross, to Wanaka SPCA where friends were going to collect him to take back to Middlemarch.

“He ate a can of spaghetti within about five seconds, it was one hungry animal,” Sharplin said.

Originally from Britain, Briggs has lived in Middlemarch for about two years and owns its general store. Store manager and friend Dennis Bowers said Briggs had left to do a series of tramps around the South Island two weeks ago.

Search and rescue head Sean Judd said Mr Briggs was clearly skilled to survive, but had wasted hours of police time as they scrambled first to find his van and then him. “The basic thing people tend to overlook is leaving clear intentions about where they’re going … the route they’re going to take and the time they’re going to come out.”

Minto claims Israeli web attacks

Posted on 14th January 2009 by Sydney News in news,nz - Tags: , , , , , , ,

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Minto claims Israeli web attacks

Thursday, 15 January 2009

Veteran protester John Minto claims the Israeli military has been launching cyber attacks on Kiwi websites.
Mr Minto said his personal website, which featured articles on Gaza, had been "downed", a Peace Movement Aotearoa newsletter affected and Flashback pages of local supporters removed."
A Security Intelligence Service spokesman said yesterday it "really didn't have any comment to make".
"This is most likely the work of a dedicated unit within the Israeli military which monitors and does its best to close down sites which are effective in organising opposition to Israeli policies.
"Groups overseas have had similar experiences, with the London-based anti-war website attacked last week. .
"We have not received any reports of attacks on New Zealand's Critical National Infrastructure."
The manager of the Centre for Critical Infrastructure Protection, Jonathon Berry, said the agency, which is part of the Government Communications Security Bureau, was not aware of a dedicated cyber attack unit within the Israeli military.
Israel apologised but stopped short of admitting the men were spies."
Alleged Israel spies Eli Cara and Uri Kelman were jailed for six months in July 2004 for passport fraud, but freed in September and sent back to Israel.

Final bid to find tramper’s body

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Final bid to find tramper’s body

By MARK HOTTON – Tuesday, 06 January 2009

MARK HOTTON
BAD MOVE: Wanaka Alpine Cliff Rescue team leader Gary Dickson questions Irina Yun’s decision to ignore warnings.

Wanaka police and search teams will today make a final attempt to find the body of missing tramper Irina Yun.
She was last seen on Wednesday while trying to cross the Cascade Saddle.
Yun, 36, of Auckland, is believed to have drowned while crossing a river in Mount Aspiring National Park.
The Wanaka police search and rescue co-ordinator, Sergeant Aaron Nicholson, said the pack's condition showed it was torn from Yun by the force of the water, confirming fears she was caught while trying to cross a river.
Yun's pack was found yesterday about 300m downstream of the Dart Hut, her intended destination after leaving the Aspiring Hut.
The search will focus on the area where the pack was found, with dogs and swift-water experts to be brought in when the weather allowed.
The Otago Regional Council advised search co-ordinators that at the time the Dart River was flowing at 700 cubic metres a second, 10 times its normal low flow of 70 cumecs.
"The gorge area in which the pack was found is basically a huge jumble of massive rocks and white water, and there is every chance the body is buried under silt or trapped well below the surface," he said.
Nicholson said the chances of finding the body were slim.
Wanaka's Alpine Cliff Rescue team leader, Gary Dickson, said: "We're not sure which one she has fallen in, but it's probably the first one down the Dart Valley.
Three teams of searchers and two helicopters began checking rivers in the area on Sunday afternoon and continued yesterday.
"She wasn't particularly savvy with water, so it would be a major obstacle for her. The rivers would have been raging by the time she got there.
Dickson questioned Yun's decision to head into the area after warnings from a hut warden and three hikers who met Yun after they had turned back."
Commercial jet-boat operators in the Glenorchy area, at the head of Lake Wakatipu, have been asked to monitor the river.
A Department of Conservation park map warns the route "is very steep and exposed and can be potentially dangerous in wet, windy or snowy conditions".
He described the area as being of "reasonably challenging tramping terrain" and unsuitable for those who normally used walking tracks or by those on their own. .
Yun had no emergency locator beacon or other communication device, and was not carrying a tent.
"But this is why there's search and rescue.
"It's raining, cold and windy, and you've got to be on top of your game, so it depends on the amount of energy you've got left, how fit you are, and what you're wearing in these conditions, and this is how your decision-making process starts getting compromised. They have their schedule and try to apply it to the back country rather than listen to advice. It would be nice if people didn't do this. She reportedly climbed in the mountains of her homeland and had visited Mount Aspiring National Park once before. She reportedly climbed in the mountains of her homeland and had visited Mount Aspiring National Park once before.
She left her four-year-old daughter in Auckland, where her former partner lives.

Kiwis get Obama invite

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Kiwis get Obama invite

By STACEY WOOD Wednesday, 03 December 2008

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BIG DAY OUT: Kasheen and Armand Grewal say their invitation to Barack Obama’s inauguration on January 20 was a complete surprise.

The last thing that Kasheen and Armand Grewal expected to find in their mailbox was an invitation to attend Barack Obama's inauguration.
Kasheen, 22, and brother Armand, 18, of Wellington, both attended Global Youth Leadership Conferences in their final years at high school, travelling to the United Nations headquarters in New York to take part in debates and political analysis. "We were ecstatic, because we had no idea they even did this, so it was a complete surprise when they came in the mail," Kasheen said.
Their attendance made them alumni members of the Congressional Youth Leadership Council, making them eligible for invitations to various events over the years, but they never expected to be invited to Mr Obama's big day.
"It's history in the making, Obama is a really great leader," Kasheen said.
The invitations to the Presidential Youth Inaugural Conference arrived in March, so they were holding their breath during election time, hoping Mr Obama would make it into office.
"He's the best man for the job, so it's a great time for us to be going," Armand said. .
Tickets to the presidential swearing-in ceremony on January 20 are free to United States citizens, but are limited to 240,000 and are available only through senators' offices.
Though neither of them is studying politics at university – Kasheen has just completed law and commerce degrees, and Armand is studying engineering and commerce – they both follow world events closely, and Armand said he would not rule out politics as a career option.
Armand is looking forward to debating with political analysts the likely implications of Mr Obama's election and the future of US politics.

Man arrested after threatening police with axe

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Man arrested after threatening police with axe

Monday, 08 September 2008

A 55-year-old Otago man is in police custody after he allegedly threatened police with a tomahawk and an axe.
Sergeant Martin Bull of Balclutha police said the man was stopped on Union Street in Milton about 1pm as an officer suspecting him of driving while disqualified.
When he came out from the house he threatened the officer with a tomahawk.
The man fled and ran to his home nearby.
The sole officer was then joined by armed officers from Lawrence.
The officer used pepper spray on the man who returned inside after the spray failed to have the expected effect.
When the man came out for the final time, he was unarmed. Milton and Balclutha, and the man came out again, this time threatening police with a log-splitting axe, before returning inside again.
Mr Bull said the man would appear in Dunedin District Court charged with driving while disqualified, refusing a blood sample, resisting police and two charges of possessing an offensive weapon. Police arrested him after a struggle.
He said further more serious charges could also be laid.
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