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Planning an overseas holiday? Did you know you can get your essentials from Australia Post?

Before jetting off to their next must-see destination, travellers in the know pave the way by visiting their local Post Office. You’ll be surprised by what Australia Post has to offer.

Sponsored by Australia Post.

Before jetting off to their next must-see destination, travellers in the know pave the way by visiting their local Post Office. You’ll be surprised by what Australia Post has to offer.

Where to travel?

Option 1 Italy: Cinque Terre

Five medieval villages painted in pretty pastels and blessed with snug fishing harbours make up Cinque Terre on the rugged Ligurian coastline – the perfect destination for a walking holiday.

Unchanged for 500 years, Monterosso, Vernazza, Corniglia, Manarola and Riomaggiore remind us how the best things in life are often the simplest.

Ancient trails link the five villages. These well-worn paths skirt silver-green olive groves and scalloped bays of sand and sapphire sea.

For the fleet of foot, the 23 kilometres between Monterosso in the north and Riomaggiore in the south can take as little as five hours, but tarry and you’ll be rewarded.

Along the trails are beautiful churches and ruined farmhouses, fountains and fragrant orchards, and tiny, oh-so-perfect-for-lunch trattorias.

The foot- weary can skip a section by taking an underground train or a dapper little ferry, but everyone is advised to book a bed before departing.

All the villages have plenty of family-run hotels or pensiones, but in the high season, plenty is never enough.

After a day exploring, a harbourside restaurant is a welcome port of call and the ideal place to plan the next day’s walk.

Grilled fish pulled out of the sea just hours before and specialty trofie pasta dishes are served alfresco

in the piazza.

Enjoy the local wine as the Romans once did, bottles of it have been found in the ruins of Pompeii.

Option 2: China Xi’an. Home of the Terracotta Army

China Xi’an. Home of the Terracotta Army

Located at the end of the Silk Road, the ancient city of Xi’an in central China’s Shaanxi province is home to one of history’s most extraordinary archaeological finds – more than 8000 life-sized clay figures of infantry soldiers, archers, cavalry horses, chariots and acrobats, all unearthed in an imperial tomb the size of a mountain.

These sentinels have been watching over the tomb of the country’s first emperor for more than 2000 years and it appears the army is about to swell in size as digital scanning techniques reveal another 1400 unearthed statues.

Recent research also suggests that the soldiers’ facial features are all different and may be portraits of individuals in the emperor’s army.

Housed in vast warehouses that cover the area of several football fields, the soldiers are so life-like that they appear to be marching from their subterranean barracks.

Just a 40-minute drive separates the Terracotta Army from Xi’an (which now has two direct flights a week from Australia).

Once China’s ancient capital, Xi’an is a fascinating destination, with towering city walls, temples, great squares and magnificent pagodas.

Where to buy your travel essentials? Australia Post – The One-Stop Travel Shop

  • You can exchange foreign cash with no commission at your local Post Office, and have photographs taken for your passport and visa applications.

  • You can even get travel insurance and a travel card.

Travel cards available at Australia Post.

LOAD & GO TRAVEL CARD: Enables you to load up to five currencies at locked-in rates. It works like a debit card. Buy it at your local Post Office and use it anywhere that takes Visa and at international ATMs.

LOAD & GO CHINA CARD: Lets you spend Australian Dollars or Chinese Yuan with UnionPay, China’s most widely accepted card network. In fact, you can you use it in 150 countries worldwide, wherever UnionPay is accepted. And with a Load&Go China card, you get VIP express China Visa service at visa application centres in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Canberra and Perth.

MULTI-CURRENCY CASH PASSPORT: Gives you access to 10 currencies and is accepted at 35.9 million MasterCard retailers or online, plus ATMs around the world.

Special offer: If you buy Australia Post Travel Insurance in-store (or online with promo code ‘TRAVELSET’), you can save 20% on your premium. Get a quote online in minutes. From comprehensive to basic cover, you choose which benefits matter most to you.

Travel Insurance: 20% discount is not available in conjunction with any other offer. The discount will be applied to the base premium of the Insurance Policy. The premium will be rounded to the nearest $1 amount and as a result the discount received may be less than 20% in some cases. Offer ends 30 June 2016. Policies may not be available to all travellers. Limits, conditions, exclusions and fees apply. This is general advice only. Australian Postal Corporation ABN 28 864 970 579 (AR No 338646) is the distributor of Australia Post Travel Insurance and is an Authorised Representative of Australia Post Services Pty Ltd ABN 67 002 599 340 (AFSL No. 457551). Insurance products are issued by Great Lakes Australia ARBN 127 740 532, ABN 18 964 580 576 (AFSL 318603). Please consider your needs, financial situation and read the relevant Product Disclosure Statements available at auspost.com.au/travelinsurance before making a decision to buy this. Prepaid TravelSIM®+: TravelSIM®+ is a registered trademark of Premas Solutions IP Pty Ltd and licensed exclusively to TravelSIM Australia Pty Ltd in Australia. Powered by . Rates vary depending on country of travel and types of calls made. Device must be unlocked for the Australia Post Prepaid TravelSIM®+ to work with your mobile device. Multi-currency Cash Passport™: MasterCard Prepaid Management Services Australia Pty Ltd (ABN 47 145 452 044, AFSL 386 837) arranges for the issue of the Cash Passport in conjunction with the issuer, Heritage Bank Limited (ABN 32 087 652 024, AFSL 240 984) (Heritage). Australian Postal Corporation ABN 67 002 599 340 (AR No. 338646), the card distributor, acts as an Authorised Representative of Australia Post Services Pty Ltd ABN 67 002 599 340 (AFSL No. 457551). MasterCard and the MasterCard Brand Mark are registered trademarks of MasterCard International Incorporated. Before you make a decision to acquire the card, please check www.cashpassport.onlinetravelmoney.com.au/auspost for the latest currencies supported. Load&Go Travel: Card fees and load limits apply. Issued by Heritage Bank Limited ABN 32 087 652 024 AFSL 240984 Australian Credit Licence 240984. Australian Postal Corporation ABN 28 864 970 579 (AR No. 338646) is the distributor of the card and is an Authorised Representative of Australia Post Services Pty Ltd ABN 67 002 599 340 (AFSL No. 457551). It is important for you to consider whether this product is right for you and to read the PDS available at auspost.com.au/loadandgotravel before purchasing your card. Excludes ATMs, over the counter at financial institutions and merchants who elect not to accept Visa Prepaid Cards. Merchants or other providers may impose limits on use of the Card. Load&Go China: The Card is issued by Bank of China (Australia) Limited (ABN 28 110 077 622) AFSL and Australian Credit Licence Number 287322. Australian Postal Corporation (ABN 28 864 970 579) AR 338646 is the distributor of the Card and is an authorised representative of Australia Post Services Pty Ltd (ABN 67 002 599 340) AFSL 457551. Information is for reference only and any advice does not take into account your personal needs and financial situation. You should consider whether the Card is appropriate for you. We recommend you read the Card Product Disclosure Statement and the Conditions of Use available at auspost.com.au/loadandgochina before acquiring the Card. Excludes ATMs, over the counter at financial institutions and merchants who elect not to accept Visa Prepaid Cards. Merchants or other providers may impose limits on use of the Card.

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Miley Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth’s adorable date night!

Miley Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth have attended their first official event since rekindling their romance earlier this year.
Miley Cyrus Liam Hemsworth

On Monday, April 11, Actor Liam Hemsworth and his rumoured fiancé Miley Cyrus attended the Los Angeles premiere of The Huntsman: Winter’s War, in support of Liam’s older brother Chris, who has a starring role in the film.

Though the couple opted not to walk the star-studded red carpet, onlookers were quick to spot to the pair canoodling together after they managed to slip inside the Regency Village Theatre in California relatively undetected.

Kayla Hockman, a PR assistant who attended the premiere , live tweeted the excitable moment she met the couple.

“I just met Liam & Miley and I’m literally dying,” she wrote on her Twitter account, before adding that the pair were “totes back together.”

She later told E! News of her chance encounter with the famed couple on a trip to the bathroom.

“I was exiting the balcony seating area to use the restroom at the same time they were,” the eye-witness described.

It was a lucky day for this superfan! (Pic via Kayla Hockman Instagram)

“I watched them both run to the restroom. They were kinda giggling because they were both running and then went separate ways into the restrooms.”

And in a moment that Kayla will no doubt remember for years to come, the pair stopped for a quick selfie.

“They were really nice when I asked them to take photos with them,” she said.

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After watching the screening, Liam, 26, and Miley, 23, made a quick exit.

The stars were spotted walking “hand in hand” as they made their getaway, says one observer.

“They were smiling and looked happy to be together,” a source told Us Weekly. “Miley [was] looking adoringly up at Liam as he led her out of the theater.”

The We Can’t Stop singer was spotted late last month donning her old engagement ring at a basketball game.

Earlier this year, it was confirmed by Miley’s godmother, Dolly Parton that the couple were in fact back together following whispers that the lovebirds had gotten re-engaged after Miley was spotted wearing her engagement ring again.

“Miley and Liam are 100 percent back on,” an insider told UD Weekly of the couple, adding that the actor has “told friends they’re engaged again.”

The pair, who called off their engagement back in September 2013, caught the world by surprise when they reconciled at the end of 2015 in the beachy Australian coastal town of Byron Bay.

Miley has been wearing her Neil Lane engagement rock ever since..

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Tara Brown facing 20 years in prison

Efforts are being made to bring Tara and the 60 Minutes crew back home safely.
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Kidnapping charges have been filed against journalist Tara Brown and her 60 Minutes crew over botched child recovery mission in Lebanon.

Channel Nine – which airs 60 Minutes – reported four charges, including charges linked to kidnapping and assault, are expected to be brought against Brown and three other members of the 60 Minutes team.

The group are believed to appear individually in a Beirut court on Tuesday and if found guilty, they could face up to 20 years in jail.

The crew had gone to Lebanon to document the story of Brisbane mother Sally Faulkner, who it is alleged was attempting to retrieve her children from their father in Beirut with the help of a British-based firm Child Abduction Recovery International.

A spokeswoman for Channel Nine said the network was cooperating fully with the Lebanese authorities.

According to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade’s (DFAT), Australia has “friendly bilateral relations with Lebanon”.

Last year, The Weekly sat down with the influential reporter to talk about the risks of her work.

The mum-of-two has travelled to the Syrian frontline twice in the past six months to report on female freedom fighters and admits those assignments take on a different complexion when there are two kids waiting at home.

“I don’t ever think I’m gung-ho about it,” she told us at the time. “You stop yourself thinking about the worst consequences because then you wouldn’t do anything.”

In the interview with The Weekly’s Susan Horsburgh, Tara spoke at length about her job’s emotional toll, her kids’ guilt trips and the father she hasn’t spoken to for almost 40 years.

Read the full story below:

In an age when attention-seekers are lionised and self-promotion is an essential life skill, humility is apparently for losers – and yet the 47-year-old 60 Minutes reporter is on a professional high, thanks to old-school qualities like talent, intelligence and a punishing work ethic.

Tara has plugged away on the country’s slickest current affairs program for almost 15 years, but she appears to have taken it up a notch in recent times, nailing a string of big stories in her poised, signature style.

Just in the past year or so, she has covered the capture of notorious paedophile Peter Scully in the Philippines, chronicled the heartbreaking disappearance of Daniel Morcombe and the hunt for his murderer, and grilled the much-maligned ex-mistress of wife killer Gerard Baden-Clay.

In June, it was disgraced “wellness” entrepreneur Belle Gibson, and a clearly fed-up Tara seemed to win more social media plaudits with every withering look she shot the cancer fraud. “Tara calls BS,” typed one tweeter. Another posted a picture with Tara’s face superimposed on Tony Abbott’s body, and the words: “TARA BROWN FOR PM.”

In that interview, Tara was exasperated with Gibson’s doublespeak and she showed it – just like earlier this year when she quizzed wife beater Steve, who claimed his spouse had brought out the worst in him and she called him out for blaming his victim. Moments like those make for compelling television and give viewers a tantalising glimpse of the woman behind the journalist.

The audience, it seems, can sense she’s a good egg and an afternoon in her company would suggest they’ve got it right.

Tara Brown on working at 60 Minutes

Tara Brown is as unassuming as the 60 Minutes HQ – what looks to be a fibro shack under Nine’s old Sydney transmission tower.

At the network’s Willoughby compound, Tara shares an office with reporter Michael Usher at the back of the program’s dilapidated cottage, which hasn’t been refurbished since George Negus and Ian Leslie first walked its halls 36 years ago.

Today, looking model-thin in a fitted jacket and pencil skirt, Tara has just taped the studio intro to her Gibson story, due to air five days later, as well as an interview for the website’s “Extra Minutes”. According to producer Stephen Taylor, she was here working on the script until midnight on Saturday and then back at nine on Sunday morning.

Like most journalists, she would prefer to be the one posing the questions – and, despite fronting 60 Minutes for so long, almost nothing has been written about her.

Still, sitting at her desk, surrounded by a photo of her beautiful boys, six-year-old Jack and four-year-old Tom, and shots on the job with AC/DC and Powderfinger, Tara is warm and accommodating – even if she does spend half the chat torturing a screwed-up tissue in her hands as she talks.

She may seem a picture of calm on screen, but she isn’t completely devoid of neuroses. “Tara frets over interviews,” says 60 Minutes’ Executive Producer, Tom Malone, “because she knows, if the interview doesn’t fly, then the story isn’t going to fly.”

Tara is known for her forensic approach and nowhere was that more evident, says Tom, than in her interview last year with baby Gammy’s father, David Farnell, a convicted child sex offender who abandoned his son with Down syndrome in Thailand with the child’s surrogate mother.

“She got the tone right, and it’s a hard thing to do because you can’t just go in and beat someone up,” says Tom. “You know you’ve got Australia riding on your back, wanting you to ask the tough questions, but you’ve got to do it delicately and in a manner that is as objective as it can be.”

It would be naïve, however, to think that total objectivity is possible. Since becoming a mother, Tara says, she has become more prone to tears and more strident in matters involving the mistreatment of children. “As a journalist, you try to go into these things open-minded, but I think the truth of it is, you still come with a bias,” she says.

In her recent “Baby Bling” story, she met a mother who fake-tanned her toddler and put the child on stage to hip-thrust in a Hooters costume. “As a mother, I probably go into it much more judgmental because I do think it’s a form of child abuse,” she says. “I don’t understand why women would do that to children.”

On growing up

Tara spent her own childhood riding horses and devouring Enid Blyton books. In the early years, she grew up with her two younger brothers on a property outside the small NSW-Queensland border town of Wallangarra, in a house built by her father, a stonemason.

When she was about nine, though, her parents divorced.

“It was a very bitter split,” recalls Tara, “and I haven’t seen him since shortly after that time.”

Tara believes her father is still alive, but hasn’t tried to contact him for almost 40 years.

“[The separation] was abrupt and felt traumatic at the time,” she says. “I will never understand how a parent can choose to have nothing to do with their children, especially after having my own, but it’s a decision my father made and so I’ve always felt it should be his choice to be in touch with me if he ever had a change of heart.”

Asked how she has coped with the loss, Tara replies, “I’m not sure. I just do. I think it’s sad, but it hasn’t been crippling – as much as I can tell. After all, I really don’t have an option but to accept the reality for what it is.”

After the split, Tara moved to Sydney with her mother, who pre-trained racehorses and later married a businessman with two younger children.

Although reluctant to psychoanalyse herself, Tara says her parents’ divorce – “like all experiences” – has shaped her.

“I guess I learned early of the impermanence of things,” she says, “and the fragility of what we might take for granted.”

Close friend Kate Rouse suspects it helped mould Tara into the strong, independent teenager she met in 1987.

The pair “clicked” in their first year at Bathurst’s Charles Sturt University, where Tara was studying for a communications degree. “At a time when everyone is trying to work out who they are, she was just who she was,” recalls Kate, a primary school teacher.

“Just so genuine – never looking over her shoulder to see if there was anyone better to talk to. You felt you could really trust her.”

Kate describes her friend as unflappable, even amid the chaos of two small kids. “If she’s ever flustered or frustrated, I can never tell,” says Kate. “She talks so nicely to the boys, she’s beautiful to them.”

On motherhood

A relative latecomer to motherhood – her boys were born when she was 40 and 42 – Tara has apparently taken to it with gusto, relishing trips to the park, colouring-in sessions and living-room concerts.

Jack and Tom, she says, are “gorgeous boys” – sensitive and determined. “Jack is probably more of a worry wart,” says Tara. “Tom’s a bit more of a free spirit. And they’re both really articulate and happy to tell you what they think.”

Especially when Mum is going away. “They can be quite vocal about not liking the idea … and sometimes that’s really difficult to walk away from,” she says, “but sometimes they don’t raise an eyebrow at all. I bribe them with presents – I’m terrible.”

Tara may have one of the most coveted jobs in Australian journalism, but it takes a brutal toll on family life, demanding at least six months on the road every year, often with no warning.

She might be helping with homework in the kitchen one day and donning a flak jacket in Western Kurdistan the next.

She has travelled to the Syrian frontline twice in the past six months to report on female freedom fighters and admits those assignments take on a different complexion when there are two kids waiting at home.

The risks, though, are calculated. “I don’t ever think I’m gung-ho about it,” she says, “but you stop yourself thinking about the worst consequences because then you wouldn’t do anything.”

Earlier this year, she travelled to the Philippines to cover the manhunt for depraved paedophile-murderer Peter Scully. It was one of the most emotionally wearing stories she has done.

“Our shoot started with the exhumation of a little girl’s body,” says Tara. “Every step of that story was incredibly harrowing. And depressing – just depressing that there was such evil and there were so many people exposed to that.”

At the end of each day, the team talks about their disturbing experiences – sort of like group therapy – but Tara says she has never sought professional help. After each extraordinary work assignment, she just re-enters ordinary suburban life. “They are very different existences, but I can’t tell you how grateful I am for the two kids coming into my bed or my friends who stick by me, despite not hearing from me for a long time,” she says, “because that is real life and it’s not mundane at all. It’s exciting and challenging and busy and guilt-ridden … but I’m very grateful for both.”

Without family support, Tara relies on a nanny and her husband of 15 years, TV producer John McAvoy. “I think he finds it frustrating at times,” says Tara, who limits her work trips to no longer than two weeks. “Life would be much more simple if I had a nine-to-five job, but … to me it’s swings and roundabouts – I do a lot of swimming lessons and birthday party drop-offs when I’m home.”

What she sacrifices most is personal space – some guilt-free time to take a walk, perhaps, or read that neglected Tim Winton or Ian McEwan novel. “A sense of your own person maybe,” says Tara.

The travel actually isn’t such a hardship. “I’m sad to be saying goodbye to my boys and missing things that are important to them, but I’d be dishonest if I said I hated the travel,” she says. “I don’t. I’m still excited by the adventure of this job.” Tara has wanted to be a journalist since she was 14. After university, she did her cadetship at WIN Television in Wollongong and went on to join Nine’s Nightline in 1992. She scored her lucky break that summer, when she filled in on A Current Affair and filed a gotcha story about a union official extorting a builder. “I was very, very lucky,” says Tara, “and that story exposed me to some people around the network.”

She joined ACA in 1993 and graduated to 60 Minutes in January 2001. And then her children arrived at the 11th hour. If you believe Tara, her life has unfolded almost beyond her control. “I was incredibly lucky,” she says. “Maybe, in a way, I’ve been very immature in how I’ve lived my life because it’s been a lot more reactionary than planned. My big plan was to be a journalist. Full stop.”

If she could advise her 16-year-old self, she would tell young Tara not to let self-consciousness hold her back. Although she still considers herself shy, she feels less so as she gets older. “I’ve also learned to push myself,” she says. “When I was 16, there’s no way I would have thought I’d be in this job because I just wasn’t confident enough. So the journey has been terrific … because I have grown into that person.”

It is dark now and Tara is due at another work meeting, yet she takes the time to ricochet from one Nine entrance to the other, trying to find the cab she has called for The Weekly. As she races up and down stairs, leading her visitor through the labyrinth that is the Nine Network, she apologises for not giving a more riveting interview. Of course, there’s no apology necessary.

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Tara Brown and Sally Faulkner go before judge in Lebanon

Efforts are being made to bring Tara and the 60 Minutes crew back home safely.
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Tara Brown and Brisbane mother Sally Faulkner have been brought before a Lebanese judge, handcuffed together as they were led into chambers shortly before midday local time.

Channel Nine reporter Tom Steinfort, who is in Lebanon following the case earlier tweeted: “Proceedings underway at Lebanon Palace of Justice – Tara Brown and Sally Faulkner have just entered the hearing”

Charges of kidnapping, harm and disrespect for authorities have been laid against the pair as well as Brown’s 60 Minutes film crew, three local men and two Britons over botched recovery of Ms Faulkner’s Noah, three, and Lahela, five, who had been living with their father in Beirut.

If found guilty they could face up to 20 years in jail.

After interviewing the group, the judge will determine if the charges will be held up or if bail will be granted pending further inquiry.

More to come…

Last year, The Weekly sat down with the influential reporter to talk about the risks of her work.

The mum-of-two has travelled to the Syrian frontline twice in the past six months to report on female freedom fighters and admits those assignments take on a different complexion when there are two kids waiting at home.

“I don’t ever think I’m gung-ho about it,” she told us at the time. “You stop yourself thinking about the worst consequences because then you wouldn’t do anything.”

In the interview with The Weekly’s Susan Horsburgh, Tara spoke at length about her job’s emotional toll, her kids’ guilt trips and the father she hasn’t spoken to for almost 40 years.

Read the full story below:

In an age when attention-seekers are lionised and self-promotion is an essential life skill, humility is apparently for losers – and yet the 47-year-old 60 Minutes reporter is on a professional high, thanks to old-school qualities like talent, intelligence and a punishing work ethic.

Tara has plugged away on the country’s slickest current affairs program for almost 15 years, but she appears to have taken it up a notch in recent times, nailing a string of big stories in her poised, signature style.

Just in the past year or so, she has covered the capture of notorious paedophile Peter Scully in the Philippines, chronicled the heartbreaking disappearance of Daniel Morcombe and the hunt for his murderer, and grilled the much-maligned ex-mistress of wife killer Gerard Baden-Clay.

In June, it was disgraced “wellness” entrepreneur Belle Gibson, and a clearly fed-up Tara seemed to win more social media plaudits with every withering look she shot the cancer fraud. “Tara calls BS,” typed one tweeter. Another posted a picture with Tara’s face superimposed on Tony Abbott’s body, and the words: “TARA BROWN FOR PM.”

In that interview, Tara was exasperated with Gibson’s doublespeak and she showed it – just like earlier this year when she quizzed wife beater Steve, who claimed his spouse had brought out the worst in him and she called him out for blaming his victim. Moments like those make for compelling television and give viewers a tantalising glimpse of the woman behind the journalist.

The audience, it seems, can sense she’s a good egg and an afternoon in her company would suggest they’ve got it right.

Tara Brown on working at 60 Minutes

Tara Brown is as unassuming as the 60 Minutes HQ – what looks to be a fibro shack under Nine’s old Sydney transmission tower.

At the network’s Willoughby compound, Tara shares an office with reporter Michael Usher at the back of the program’s dilapidated cottage, which hasn’t been refurbished since George Negus and Ian Leslie first walked its halls 36 years ago.

Today, looking model-thin in a fitted jacket and pencil skirt, Tara has just taped the studio intro to her Gibson story, due to air five days later, as well as an interview for the website’s “Extra Minutes”. According to producer Stephen Taylor, she was here working on the script until midnight on Saturday and then back at nine on Sunday morning.

Like most journalists, she would prefer to be the one posing the questions – and, despite fronting 60 Minutes for so long, almost nothing has been written about her.

Still, sitting at her desk, surrounded by a photo of her beautiful boys, six-year-old Jack and four-year-old Tom, and shots on the job with AC/DC and Powderfinger, Tara is warm and accommodating – even if she does spend half the chat torturing a screwed-up tissue in her hands as she talks.

She may seem a picture of calm on screen, but she isn’t completely devoid of neuroses. “Tara frets over interviews,” says 60 Minutes’ Executive Producer, Tom Malone, “because she knows, if the interview doesn’t fly, then the story isn’t going to fly.”

Tara is known for her forensic approach and nowhere was that more evident, says Tom, than in her interview last year with baby Gammy’s father, David Farnell, a convicted child sex offender who abandoned his son with Down syndrome in Thailand with the child’s surrogate mother.

“She got the tone right, and it’s a hard thing to do because you can’t just go in and beat someone up,” says Tom. “You know you’ve got Australia riding on your back, wanting you to ask the tough questions, but you’ve got to do it delicately and in a manner that is as objective as it can be.”

It would be naïve, however, to think that total objectivity is possible. Since becoming a mother, Tara says, she has become more prone to tears and more strident in matters involving the mistreatment of children. “As a journalist, you try to go into these things open-minded, but I think the truth of it is, you still come with a bias,” she says.

In her recent “Baby Bling” story, she met a mother who fake-tanned her toddler and put the child on stage to hip-thrust in a Hooters costume. “As a mother, I probably go into it much more judgmental because I do think it’s a form of child abuse,” she says. “I don’t understand why women would do that to children.”

On growing up

Tara spent her own childhood riding horses and devouring Enid Blyton books. In the early years, she grew up with her two younger brothers on a property outside the small NSW-Queensland border town of Wallangarra, in a house built by her father, a stonemason.

When she was about nine, though, her parents divorced.

“It was a very bitter split,” recalls Tara, “and I haven’t seen him since shortly after that time.”

Tara believes her father is still alive, but hasn’t tried to contact him for almost 40 years.

“[The separation] was abrupt and felt traumatic at the time,” she says. “I will never understand how a parent can choose to have nothing to do with their children, especially after having my own, but it’s a decision my father made and so I’ve always felt it should be his choice to be in touch with me if he ever had a change of heart.”

Asked how she has coped with the loss, Tara replies, “I’m not sure. I just do. I think it’s sad, but it hasn’t been crippling – as much as I can tell. After all, I really don’t have an option but to accept the reality for what it is.”

After the split, Tara moved to Sydney with her mother, who pre-trained racehorses and later married a businessman with two younger children.

Although reluctant to psychoanalyse herself, Tara says her parents’ divorce – “like all experiences” – has shaped her.

“I guess I learned early of the impermanence of things,” she says, “and the fragility of what we might take for granted.”

Close friend Kate Rouse suspects it helped mould Tara into the strong, independent teenager she met in 1987.

The pair “clicked” in their first year at Bathurst’s Charles Sturt University, where Tara was studying for a communications degree. “At a time when everyone is trying to work out who they are, she was just who she was,” recalls Kate, a primary school teacher.

“Just so genuine – never looking over her shoulder to see if there was anyone better to talk to. You felt you could really trust her.”

Kate describes her friend as unflappable, even amid the chaos of two small kids. “If she’s ever flustered or frustrated, I can never tell,” says Kate. “She talks so nicely to the boys, she’s beautiful to them.”

On motherhood

A relative latecomer to motherhood – her boys were born when she was 40 and 42 – Tara has apparently taken to it with gusto, relishing trips to the park, colouring-in sessions and living-room concerts.

Jack and Tom, she says, are “gorgeous boys” – sensitive and determined. “Jack is probably more of a worry wart,” says Tara. “Tom’s a bit more of a free spirit. And they’re both really articulate and happy to tell you what they think.”

Especially when Mum is going away. “They can be quite vocal about not liking the idea … and sometimes that’s really difficult to walk away from,” she says, “but sometimes they don’t raise an eyebrow at all. I bribe them with presents – I’m terrible.”

Tara may have one of the most coveted jobs in Australian journalism, but it takes a brutal toll on family life, demanding at least six months on the road every year, often with no warning.

She might be helping with homework in the kitchen one day and donning a flak jacket in Western Kurdistan the next.

She has travelled to the Syrian frontline twice in the past six months to report on female freedom fighters and admits those assignments take on a different complexion when there are two kids waiting at home.

The risks, though, are calculated. “I don’t ever think I’m gung-ho about it,” she says, “but you stop yourself thinking about the worst consequences because then you wouldn’t do anything.”

Earlier this year, she travelled to the Philippines to cover the manhunt for depraved paedophile-murderer Peter Scully. It was one of the most emotionally wearing stories she has done.

“Our shoot started with the exhumation of a little girl’s body,” says Tara. “Every step of that story was incredibly harrowing. And depressing – just depressing that there was such evil and there were so many people exposed to that.”

At the end of each day, the team talks about their disturbing experiences – sort of like group therapy – but Tara says she has never sought professional help. After each extraordinary work assignment, she just re-enters ordinary suburban life. “They are very different existences, but I can’t tell you how grateful I am for the two kids coming into my bed or my friends who stick by me, despite not hearing from me for a long time,” she says, “because that is real life and it’s not mundane at all. It’s exciting and challenging and busy and guilt-ridden … but I’m very grateful for both.”

Without family support, Tara relies on a nanny and her husband of 15 years, TV producer John McAvoy. “I think he finds it frustrating at times,” says Tara, who limits her work trips to no longer than two weeks. “Life would be much more simple if I had a nine-to-five job, but … to me it’s swings and roundabouts – I do a lot of swimming lessons and birthday party drop-offs when I’m home.”

What she sacrifices most is personal space – some guilt-free time to take a walk, perhaps, or read that neglected Tim Winton or Ian McEwan novel. “A sense of your own person maybe,” says Tara.

The travel actually isn’t such a hardship. “I’m sad to be saying goodbye to my boys and missing things that are important to them, but I’d be dishonest if I said I hated the travel,” she says. “I don’t. I’m still excited by the adventure of this job.” Tara has wanted to be a journalist since she was 14. After university, she did her cadetship at WIN Television in Wollongong and went on to join Nine’s Nightline in 1992. She scored her lucky break that summer, when she filled in on A Current Affair and filed a gotcha story about a union official extorting a builder. “I was very, very lucky,” says Tara, “and that story exposed me to some people around the network.”

She joined ACA in 1993 and graduated to 60 Minutes in January 2001. And then her children arrived at the 11th hour. If you believe Tara, her life has unfolded almost beyond her control. “I was incredibly lucky,” she says. “Maybe, in a way, I’ve been very immature in how I’ve lived my life because it’s been a lot more reactionary than planned. My big plan was to be a journalist. Full stop.”

If she could advise her 16-year-old self, she would tell young Tara not to let self-consciousness hold her back. Although she still considers herself shy, she feels less so as she gets older. “I’ve also learned to push myself,” she says. “When I was 16, there’s no way I would have thought I’d be in this job because I just wasn’t confident enough. So the journey has been terrific … because I have grown into that person.”

It is dark now and Tara is due at another work meeting, yet she takes the time to ricochet from one Nine entrance to the other, trying to find the cab she has called for The Weekly. As she races up and down stairs, leading her visitor through the labyrinth that is the Nine Network, she apologises for not giving a more riveting interview. Of course, there’s no apology necessary.

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Romance in the air for William and Kate

It was a camp fire attended by dozens of people, but the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge still found time for a little romance.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were entranced by the energetic dancing of a three-year-old boy at a romantic fireside party last night in Assam on the third day of their tour of India.

The couple smiled and pointed at him as he moved between a group of dancers and drummers including his father at a fireside harvest festival at a Bihu festival by the Diphlu River Lodge in the Kaziranga National Park.

Kate was in her third outfit of the day, a green patterned dress by American designer Anna Sui, while William wore white shirt and grey khakis and desert boots, as they sat around a fire in a sandy enclosure that had been made sticky by a downpour about half an hour earlier.

Despite the tacky ground, the women danced barefoot. But it was the little boy that caught their eye. “They were so happy to see him. They were really watching him, said Ranjinee Bhukan, of the British deputy high commission. “I’m sure they were remembering their little one.”

The little boy who captivated the royal couple.

At the end they sought him out to meet him, and chatted to his dad. “You were very energetic,” William told the little boy. “He knows his dancing very well,” he added.

The Rongali Bihup is a spring festival marking the end of harvest and the beginning of the New Year. Bhukan added, “It means we are happy that the harvest is over. We welcome the New Year and we pray to the Lord that the year goes well.”

The couple, looking relaxed around the fire, clearly enjoyed themselves and were tapping their feet to the music. “They are a lovely couple. I thought I would be overwhelmed and I might get tongue-tied but when I saw them they were so friendly and so normal.”

When they met the musicians afterwards William tried his hand at playing the gogona, an instrument like harp made out of bamboo. “Is there anything you can’t play?” he asked Krishna Kanta Baruah. “Very unusual, brilliant.”

The royals are staying at Diphlu Lodge in the park for two nights as they see for themselves the efforts to both preserve wildlife and learn what’s being done to manage the conflicts that arise when humans and wild animals live in close proximity.

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Tara Brown facing 20 years in prison

Efforts are being made to bring Tara and the 60 Minutes crew back home safely.
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Kidnapping charges have been filed against journalist Tara Brown and her 60 Minutes crew over botched child recovery mission in Lebanon.

Channel Nine – which airs 60 Minutes – reported four charges, including charges linked to kidnapping and assault, are expected to be brought against Brown and three other members of the 60 Minutes team.

The group appeared individually in a Beirut court on Tuesday and if found guilty, they could face up to 20 years in jail. However there is still hope of that being downgraded.

The crew had gone to Lebanon to document the story of Brisbane mother Sally Faulkner, who it is alleged was attempting to retrieve her children from their father in Beirut with the help of a British-based firm Child Abduction Recovery International.

A spokeswoman for Channel Nine said the network was cooperating fully with the Lebanese authorities.

According to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade’s (DFAT), Australia has “friendly bilateral relations with Lebanon.”

The ABC reports that Ms Faulkner’s charges could possibly be downgraded to three months in prison as her efforts to get her children back weren’t for ransom – instead it was a mother simply trying to be be back together with her children.

Sally claims her estranged husband took their two children to Lebanon and refused to return them.

On Tuesday, Tara was led into court wearing handcuffs. Inside, she spoke to a judge and Ali Elamine, the father of the children, for around an hour.

As she left court, News Corp asked the reporter how she was doing. “It’s fine thank you,” she replied.

Last year, The Australian Women’s Weekly sat down with the influential reporter to talk about the risks of her work.

The mum-of-two has travelled to the Syrian frontline twice in the past six months to report on female freedom fighters and admits those assignments take on a different complexion when there are two kids waiting at home.

“I don’t ever think I’m gung-ho about it,” Tara said at the time. “You stop yourself thinking about the worst consequences because then you wouldn’t do anything.”

In the interview with The Weekly‘s Susan Horsburgh, Tara spoke at length about her job’s emotional toll, her kids’ guilt trips and the father she hasn’t spoken to for almost 40 years.

You can read the full interview here. This story originally appeared on The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Kidnapping charges have been filed against journalist Tara Brown and her 60 Minutes crew over botched child recovery mission in Lebanon.

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The little boy who charmed his way into the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s heart

Three days into their majestic tour of India, Catherine and William have fallen in love with the colourful nation, but one boy has captured the royals’ heart.
Duke and Duchess of Cambridge

The duo escaped the hustle and bustle of city life and headed to the Kaziranga National Park.

In the state of Assam, Kate and Wills were greeted with a warm reception, and they relaxed in front of a fire and were treated to a peek into rural life through dance and musical performances.

At the vibrant event, the parents to George and Charlotte were particularly taken by the dancing of an adorable three-year-old boy.

Watch the the royals meet the charming little boy in the player below. Post continues after the video!

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“You were very energetic,” William told the youngster, before adding: “He knows his dancing very well.”

Upon meeting the little lad, Catherine was thoroughly amused, laughing out loud when he cheekily stamped on her foot.

Watching on, was British deputy high commission, Ranjinee Bhukan, who noted the little boy could have reminded the parents of their own cheeky son, Prince George.

Catherine was besotted with the little boy.

The young lad stepped on the royal’s foot, which had her in a fit of laughter. No doubt she was reminded of her own cheeky monkey, Prince George.

“They were so happy to see him,” Ranjinee quipped. “They were really watching him. I’m sure they were remembering their little one.”

Adding, “They are a lovely couple. I thought I would be overwhelmed and I might get tongue-tied but when I saw them they were so friendly and so normal.”

Despite their down-to-earth persona, they are still royal and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge come with an impressive entourage.

When they arrived at Tezpur Airport in Assam on Tuesday, the public were given a rare glimpse into the their extensive team.

The 34-year-old’s PA and stylist Natasha Archer was snapped carrying armfuls of clothes and make-up. She was appointed her stylist shortly after the royal announced her second pregnancy.

The women behind the magic that is Kate: Sophie Agnew (L) and Natasha Archer (R) were pictured leaving the plane.

Catherine’s longtime hairdresser Amanda Cook Tucker is also on the royal tour.

Walking next to her was Sophie Agnew, assistant to the Duchess’s Private Secretary, who was also carrying a large bag and a suit carrier.

The mum-of-two’s hairdresser Amanda Cook Tucker, the women behind the beloved Princess’ trademark Chelsea blow-dry, is also on the royal tour to help keep Kate’s mane in place.

Amanda has been a part of Catherine’s team for some time, joining the royal on previous tours and she even visited the hospital shortly after Prince George was born in 2013.

Relive all the highlights from the royal India tour right here

Catherine has had seriously good hair on this tour!

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Woolworths’ best ever customer response

Love in the produce aisle sparks hilarious online chat.
woolworths supermarket trolley

When you think of Woolworths, romance may not be the first thing to spring to mind however in Mermaid Waters, QLD, something spicy is afoot.

Blake Nicholls and Brok Neilson were purchasing ingredients for a curry when Brok saw a vision of beauty buying mushrooms, and they snapped a quick photo of her from behind, reports Daily Mail.

In a bid to help his friend meet the girl of his dreams, Blake, 22, asked Woolworths to help Brok to locate the “girl of his dreams” sparking a hilarious communique on the Woolworths Facebook page.

“For years, you’ve brought people together with your sensational service, fantastic products with a catchy theme song that’s kept me coming back, so now do what you do best and bring these two together,” wrote Blake as he played Cupid.

To which the supermarket giant’s social media team replied:

“whilst we’re more interested in matching your dear friend Brok with the perfect chick-en and bay leaf to create the curry of his dreams, we still think you’re a great wing-man!

“Next time tell Brok not to be chicken, just rice up and say hello! We hear love grows in the produce department”

Next time tell Brok not to be chicken, just rice up and say hello! We hear love grows in the produce department”

Not wanting to be left out of the act, Brok piped in to defend himself, and state his motives are pure.

“Thankyou Woolworths for your kind words and although I did chick-en out this time. I’ll be making sure not to make a #meal of it the second time around.

“My intentions are completely honourable. Hopefully I can butter her up and curry her favour by keeping it fresh in the produce section.”

Mystery mushroom loving dream girl ©Facebook

The boys have declared that they will be waiting in the produce section every night at 7.38pm in case they can see the girl again.

In their excitement they forgot their multi-pack of toilet paper so they really had to go back at least the following day anyway.

“Hey Blake and Brok! You may not have found your dream girl tonight but you did leave your toilet paper behind. See you at 7.38 tomorrow night.”

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Prince William proves he is Diana’s son

His mother was the Princess of Hearts and William proved her spirit is alive in him in India yesterday.

Are William and Kate following in Diana’s footsteps? There was certainly a sense of it yesterday when the couple decided to spend their only morning in Delhi on a low key visit to a drop-in centre for charity Salaam Baalak at Delhi train station and with a group of Indian women to discuss violence against women.

The drop-in centre is a lifeline for up to 7,000 kids a year ranging from age 8 to 15. They come to escape prostitution, people trafficking or sexual and physical abuse. With just a couple of media shadowing them, this was to be a time for the royal duo to really get to grips with the complex problems in India and spend quality time with the most vulnerable.

William joined in a board game while hearing about the children’s traumatic experiences. The charity’s director Sanjoy Roy explained: “The boys come here for four hours of lessons and some food every day. When they’re not here, they’re at the railway station.”

William asked: “Is that dangerous?” Mr Roy replied: “Yes so they try to stick together … every day around 40 to 50 new children arrive at the station. They often have to deal with trauma, learning difficulties, ADHD and we have special programmes to help them with that. These children are the most vulnerable. Some may have their eyes gouged out or hands hacked off. The primary reasons they run away from home are misunderstanding with step-parents, physical and mental abuse, incredible poverty or a life event such as forced marriage.”

William displaying his mum’s magic touch.

The charity has six homes, 21 contact centres and three Childline centres near stations, bus stands and railway stations across Delhi.

William asked: “What can we do to help?” Mr Roy replied: “Spread the word. People think of them as street kids, beggars, thieves but they are just children. They deserve an education, future and a life. They have a right to a childhood.”

The couple met Amir, 16, who’d become addicted to glue-sniffing nine months ago while living rough at the train station. Counsellors from Salaam Baalak had helped him get detox treatment and now he’s clean.

Kate was impressed with the camaraderie between the boys and William asked them what they hoped to be in the future. One said a doctor, another policeman and a third wanted to run his own shop.

“It’s very interesting that the kids want professional careers,” said William. “In the UK you ask them and they say footballers or pop stars. Is there the opportunity for them to do it, to have these professional careers – that’s the question?”

The charity’s managing director Sanjoy Roy said: “We hope so. If we can’t get them home the only thing to do is to send them back to school as soon as possible. We want them to study to enable them to have a future.”

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge also met with a group of Indian women. The meeting was convened at the personal request of the Duke who wanted an opportunity to hear directly from women working to support other women and girls. He also wanted to get a sense of work being done to help young women to achieve their full potential and for men to become more supportive of the women and girls in their lives.

The couple met acid attack survivor Laxmi Agarwal and heard about her inspirational campaign ‘Stop Acid Attacks’. Laxmi was attacked at 15 by a 32-year-old man after she rejected his marriage proposal. She explained her decision to stop covering her face in order to encourage other victims not to hide and also spoke of her successful fight for tougher legal restrictions on the sale of acid.

Finally the royals met Sunita Jaiswal, a survivor of domestic abuse, who thanks to the support of Delhi’s Azad foundation, has turned her life around. Through the foundation Sunita was able to train as a driver, giving her independence and an income which allowed her to send her children to school. She told The Duke and Duchess that the confidence she gained through training allowed her remaining fear “to flow out of her” and she now faces the future with optimism.

It is issues like these that both Kate and William are beginning to get involved with and look like being a cornerstone of their future charity work.

Back to matters of state the couple then went for lunch with Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi.

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Dog walks at elderly owners pace

The true definition of man’s best friend.

If you needed any more proof that dogs are the best, here it is.

A video has gone viral of an elderly man taking his pup for a walk.

However, it’s not just a standard man and his dog video.

The elderly man is walking with a cane along a very busy street and his gorgeous little pup walks at exactly the same pace, like a man’s best friend should!

The video has already garnered over 98, 000 views, showing that everyone loves a beautiful tale of a man and his pooch.

How sweet!

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