South Australia records two new COVID-19 cases, taking state s cluster total to 14 sbs.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sbs.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
798 steps that were PURE GOLD: It was like running a marathon with three men on his back. But in the final part of a memoir to make you cheer him all the way, BEN PARKINSON tells of his Olympic triumph. and one final battle with MoD penny-pinchers
Ben Parkinson is the most seriously injured British soldier from the Afghan war
He defied medics expectations to go skydiving and carry the Olympic torch
Receiving MBE he met Prince Charles who said ‘You are an inspiration to all of us
His horrific injuries left doctors fearing the worst. But as BEN PARKINSON reveals in the second part of his awe-inspiring memoir, it was an Army buddy s sauce comedy act that proved a turning point. plus priceless support from Mail readers.
Long and cavernous, with paint peeling from the walls, the dilapidated intensive care ward at Selly Oak hospital in Birmingham was pitch black at night apart from the light over each patient’s bed.
All around us were the sounds of life support pumps and hoses sucking and gurgling, computers pulsing and patients moaning.
Still comatose following the landmine explosion in Afghanistan which had almost claimed my life two days earlier, I was unaware of any of this. But my parents will never forget the horror of seeing me there on the night I was flown back to the UK.
20:54 EDT, 7 April 2021
Two men have been charged after bombs and Neo-Nazi propaganda were discovered in raids on Adelaide homes allegedly linked to a prominent white supremacist group.
South Australia Police confirmed raids were conducted across the city early Wednesday after the Neo-Nazi group s leader claimed the homes of 15 Adelaide members were raided.
Police added there was no known threat to the public. The investigation related to people associated with ideologically motivated violent extremism, a spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia.
Two men have been charged after bombs and Neo-Nazi propaganda were discovered in raids across Adelaide (stock image) The investigation remains ongoing and there has been no known threat to any person or the public.
Last modified on Thu 8 Apr 2021 00.39 EDT
South Australian police have arrested a man for possessing an improvised explosive device while a second has been charged with the possession of extremist material during a series of raids across Adelaide targeting members of the far-right.
SA police confirmed it had searched “a number of domestic premises across the metropolitan area” on Wednesday.
A police spokesperson said the searches were part of an investigation related to “people associated with ideologically motivated violent extremism”.
The spokesperson confirmed the raids had led to two arrests, including a 32-year-old man from Munno Para in Adelaide’s outer suburbs.