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Ïîäðîáíàÿ èíôîðìàöèÿ:Election 2016 material sought by national library of Victoria Greens leader is asking for an investigation following allegations of child abuse over three decades A young woman has accused a former Liberal MP of groping and kissing her when she was 13, including touching her breasts in an attempt to establish sexual relationships with her. Ms Gillard was the former NSW Liberal minister for indigenous affairs, when she made the allegations against former foreign affairs minister Peter Dutton in 1997. The Australian government refused to investigate the claim, but Mr Dutton resigned amid reports the allegations had been made before he took office. Now The Nation journalist Peter Greste has published audio tapes from three different tapes of his meetings with Ms Gillard, and a summary of an interview he did with a woman claiming to be the "victim" who had made the claims of sexual abuse. In her interview with Greste, the woman claimed the MP took up a position of power in her community while she was a student, when she was 10 years old. "I was shocked and appalled by what I was hearing. I really did believe my life had been changed forever by it, having experienced it, " she told The Nation. In her interview with Greste, the woman said she saw Ms Gillard for three days and went away once for school. "She said a great deal about her job as minister. She said to me on three days, you should be proud of your job. You should be proud of what the government has done to our nation. She was making me feel a kind of relief that my life was not in flames. She was making me think, what could have happened? What did all of this have to do with what I'd been told all along?" Ms Gillard denies the claims are true. 'I was shocked and appalled by what I was hearing' She did not reveal whether she saw the woman in person or in person with friends, but Greste said he discovered she had been speaking about the alleged incident in 2003 at the dinner party she organised, attended by senior Liberals and was accompanied by her daughter at the time. It wasn't until Mr Dutton accepted her claims that she was able to tell her mother that she had also received abuse. "I didn't realize it and when I did, I didn't think she was the only one. It was really strange to know you had such a strong connection to a woman you didn't know, " she said. Gillard is being backed by an alliance of former government colleagues of former foreign affairs minister Paul Keating who also says the woman who first reported the claims told him she had been raped by a senior Liberal minister. One of the senio <a href=https://www. gohappyclub. com/>&#50864;&#47532;&#52852;&#51648;&#45432;</a> <a href=https://www. prakritikolkata. com/>&#50864;&#47532;&#52852;&#51648;&#45432;</a> <a href=https://www. grupo-huk. com/>&#48148;&#52852;&#46972;</a> <a href=https://www. shamsbim. com/>&#48148;&#52852;&#46972;&#49324;&#51060;&#53944;</a> <a href=https://www. onikssport. com/>&#50864;&#47532;&#52852;&#51648;&#45432;</a> Call for more foster carers in central western qld Posted It's the end of an era for foster carers in central western Queensland, and it has local families on the verge of a new daycare due to run out of space in the local school playgrounds. The Sunshine Coast Council has received 10, 000 applications for foster carers, but that number is starting to dwindle, with around 17, 000 available on any given day. It's been around a year since the council last allocated any places, which meant the need for foster carers was rising exponentially. "It's just a big increase in the demand for foster carers, " Sunshine Coast Council director of family welfare Mary Holland said. "People are coming in with the idea they're the best for kids. People are saying we are the best family welfare organisation in the country, we don't have enough places for anybody, so we can't have enough foster carers or people who have special needs in place because of age or mental or intellectual limitations. " Ms Holland said as demand had grown, the council began looking for alternative places for foster carers — including a new school where parents and carers will be able to take in children without fear of abuse, neglect or neglect. "It's just because of the size of it that there's a large need, " she said. "We're really struggling to find a suitable way in where we are, but we're trying to do whatever we can to be in a place to meet that demand that's there. " The council will be taking applications, with those deemed suitable likely to be picked up in late October. "In the last five years, in all other parts of the state, there has been one vacancy every day. It's not surprising that we've been losing people to foster carers, " Ms Holland said. Topics: community-and-society, charities-and-community-organisations, children, children, sa First posted
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Ëè÷íàÿ ñòðàíèöà:https://www.shamsbim.com/
Äàòà äîáàâëåíèÿ:2020-07-05
www.job.erynok.com, 2008
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