Port Arthur 25 years on: 'A dark pain that never leaves'
For those caught up in the Port Arthur massacre, time has still not healed the emotional scars of that horrific day.
Crime
by Ellen Whinnett
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Tony Rundle vividly recalls flying towards Hobart on that autumn day in 1996, a sick sense of foreboding hanging over him.
The then-premier of Tasmania had been preparing to drive from his farm outside Devonport in the state's north-west to the capital ready for the week's Parliamentary sitting.
It was Sunday, April 28.
"A phone call came through about 2.30pm from my chief of staff saying there were reports of an incident at Port Arthur,'' Rundle, now aged 82, told News Corp.