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Gladys Berejiklian has resigned as NSW premier after the state's anti-corruption watchdog announced it would investigate her over her relationship with ex-MP Daryl Maguire.
"I have no option but to resign from the office of premier," she said on Friday.
She will also leave parliament as soon as a by-election for her seat can be held.
Ms Berejiklian did not take questions from journalists after saving she had always exercised her duties with "the highest levels of integrity".
She will remain premier until her successor is anointed. She ascended to the NSW top job in early 2017.
The Independent Commission Against Corruption said in a statement on Friday that it was investigating whether Ms Berejiklian "exercised public functions" in a position of conflict between her public duties and private relationship with Mr Maguire, revealed in late 2020.
A public inquiry on the matter will be held from October 18, overseen by ICAC Assistant Commissioner Ruth McColl SC.
It is expected to last about 10 days.
ICAC said Ms Berejiklian would be investigated over grant funding to the Australian Clay Target Association in 2016/17 and grant funding to the Riverina Conservatorium of Music in Wagga Wagga in 2018.
It plans to look into whether Ms Berejiklian's relationship with Mr Maguire, then the Wagga Wagga MP, affected those arrangements and constituted a breach of public trust or partial exercise of official functions.
ICAC will also investigate whether Ms Berejiklian should have "suspected on reasonable grounds" that Mr Maguire may have engaged in corrupt conduct, and thus failed to report him to ICAC as required.
It will look into whether she "was liable to allow or encourage" his conduct.
Mr Maguire is accused of abusing his public office while serving between 2012 and 2018 as a state MP.
He's accused of using his public office and parliamentary resources to improperly gain a benefit for himself or for G8way International, a company Mr Maguire allegedly "effectively controlled".
Mr Maguire was forced to quit Ms Berejiklian's government in 2018 after a separate ICAC inquiry heard evidence he sought payments to help broker deals for property developers.
The pair's five-year relationship was kept secret until Ms Berejiklian disclosed it at an ICAC hearing in October 2020.
© AAP 2021
Image Credit: GladysB / Instagram
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Australians will be able to self-test for coronavirus at home from November provided a series of hurdles are cleared.
Therapeutic Goods Administration boss John Skerritt is confident rapid antigen tests will be available in homes from November 1.
While no company has a kit ready for the Australian market, he believes several stars will align before the date announced on Tuesday.
Professor Skerritt said all tests granted approval for home use needed to be tested against the Delta variant.
"It does seem that some of the tests - and I don't want to name particular products, but some of them are quite significant products - are much less sensitive against Delta," he told a Senate committee.
The TGA also needs all test manufacturers to ensure instructions are suitable for about a year-seven level of reading or people for whom English is a second language.
Packaging must include a 1800-number to ring for advice on results or other issues with rapid antigen tests.
"We are still confident, because we've been holding hands with some of the most advanced companies for a few weeks, that by November 1 there will be products available," Professor Skerritt said.
Home rapid antigen tests, which can return results in 20 minutes, have been used overseas for months.
But Australian authorities have been cautious in expanding use beyond selected workplaces because of concerns around accuracy compared to nose and throat swabs.
The TGA's November 1 approval date has been chosen to allow legal changes, as well as factoring in higher vaccination rates and disease as Australia opens up.
State and territory governments would have the power to compel people who test positive at home to get a PCR test.
Health Minister Greg Hunt is confident some of the more than 30 tests already approved to be used under supervision will be converted to meet the conditions for home use.
"This is an important additional protection for Australians," he told reporters.
"One of the important things is that we can supplement what is known as PCR testing - the testing that we all know if we go to a Commonwealth or a state clinic - with the home testing."
© AAP 2021
Image: Partynia, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
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R Kelly has been convicted by a federal jury in his sex-trafficking trial, where prosecutors accused the R&B singer of exploiting his stardom over a quarter-century to lure women and underage girls into his orbit for sex.
Jurors in Brooklyn federal court deliberated for a little more than a day before voting to convict the 54-year-old Kelly on all nine counts he faced, after a five-and-a-half week trial.
Kelly kept his head down as the verdict was read on Monday, with his face shielded by a white mask.
A woman watching from an overflow courtroom cried as the verdict was read, as did others who had waited to learn Kelly's fate in a park next to the courthouse.
Deveraux Cannick, a lawyer for Kelly, told reporters that the defence was disappointed. "I'm sure we'll be appealing," he said.
Kelly faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years behind bars, and could face up to life in prison at his May 4, 2022, sentencing.
The singer, whose full name is Robert Sylvester Kelly, is one of the most prominent people tried on sex charges during the #MeToo movement, which amplified accusations that had dogged him since the early 2000s.
Like Kelly, many of his accusers were black, differentiating the case from recent #MeToo convictions of comedian Bill Cosby and movie producer Harvey Weinstein. Cosby's conviction was overturned in June.
"We hope that today's verdict brings some measure of comfort and closure to the victims," Acting US Attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis told reporters.
Kelly had been charged with one count of racketeering and eight counts of violating the Mann Act, which prohibits transporting people across state lines for prostitution.
Prosecutors said Kelly took advantage of his fame to recruit victims, including some plucked from crowds at his concerts, with the aid of people in his entourage.
Witnesses said some victims had hoped Kelly could jump-start their careers, only to find he demanded their strict obedience and would punish them if they failed.
Testimony from government witnesses graphically portrayed an unseemly side to Kelly's 30-year music career, whose highlights include the 1996 Grammy-winning smash I Believe I Can Fly.
His alleged victims included the late singer Aaliyah, who Kelly briefly and illegally married in 1994 when she was 15. Aaliyah died in a 2001 plane crash.
Many accusations against Kelly were included in the 2019 documentary Surviving R Kelly.
Several witnesses testified that Kelly instilled fear if his victims did not fulfil his every need, sexual and otherwise.
Jurors heard how Kelly would compel victims to follow "Rob's rules", including that they call him "Daddy" and get permission to eat or go to the bathroom.
One witness hoping to interview him for a radio station said he locked her up for at least two days without food or water before assaulting her.
Witnesses also said Kelly pressed accusers to write "apology letters" to potentially absolve him of wrongdoing, and concealed before intercourse that he had contracted herpes.
Gloria Allred, a lawyer for the woman who said she was locked up, alluded after the verdict to Cannick's closing argument where he invoked the civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr in urging jurors to show courage and acquit Kelly.
"Despite the fact that he thought he could control all of his victims, he was wrong," Allred told reporters, referring to Kelly.
"Based on the evidence, the jury must have concluded that R Kelly is no Martin Luther King Jr."
Kelly's lawyers sought to portray Kelly's accusers as former fans who felt jilted when they fell from his favour, and that their sex with Kelly was consensual.
They also tried to show how some accusers stayed with Kelly long after the alleged abuses began, and questioned why they failed to go to the police or waited years to come forward.
Kelly still faces federal charges in Chicago on child pornography and obstruction, and state charges in Illinois and Minnesota.
© AP 2021
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Illawarra
There have been 75 new cases of covid19 reported in the Illawarra/Shoalhaven local Health District up to eight o'clock last night,
* 59 cases are from the Wollongong LGA. 14 are linked to known cases.
* 10 cases are from the Shellharbour LGA. 6 are linked to known cases.
* 5 cases are from the Shoalhaven LGA. 3 are linked to known cases.
* 1 case is from the Kiama LGA (not linked)
Hunter
There were 45 new cases across the Hunter New England Local Health District to 8 last night. This brings the total number of cases in the District to 673 since 5 August 2021.
* 19 in Lake Macquarie LGA
* 15 in Newcastle LGA
* 5 in Cessnock LGA
* 4 in Maitland LGA
* 1 in Singleton LGA
* 1 in Mid-Coast LGA
32 cases are linked to known cases, and 13 are under investigation.
The total number of cases in the District is now 673 since August 5 2021.
There have also been fragments of the virus detected in Muswellbrook.
Southern NSW
There have been 11 new cases reported in Southern NSW to eight last night:
* 7 new cases are in Goulburn – six are linked to known cases and one is under investigation.
* 2 new cases are in Batemans Bay and are linked to known cases.
* 1 new case is in Queanbeyan and is linked to a known case.
* 1 new case is unallocated to a location and is under investigation.
This brings the total cases in SNSWLHD to 109 since the start of the current outbreak in June.
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