Australia
Mick Jagger’s lover Melanie Hamrick features in racy snaps
By Sebastian Shakespeare for the Daily Mail
Published: 20:43 EST, 19 December 2017 | Updated: 21:07..

By Sebastian Shakespeare for the Daily Mail
Published: 20:43 EST, 19 December 2017 | Updated: 21:07 EST, 19 December 2017
Melanie Hamrick posts racy snaps of herself online after enjoying a romantic getaway
Sir Mick Jagger’s girlfriend Melanie Hamrick is happy to be in the limelight. Days after the ballerina, 31, enjoyed romantic getaway with the Rolling Stone in California, she is now posting racy snaps of herself online.
Sporting a nude sheer minidress, Mel, who gave birth to Mick’s eighth child, Deveraux, last year, leaves little to the imagination as she shows off her behind.
‘Looking forward to being a beach bum for the holidays!’ she writes.
In the second picture, she displays her lean limbs in a ballet lunge. Sir Mick, 74, was reportedly courting 22-year-old film producer Noor Alfallah while his band were touring in Paris in October, but things appear to be cooling down as he focuses on the mother of his one-year-old son.
Sporting a nude sheer minidress, Mel, who gave birth to Mick’s eighth child, Deveraux, last year, leaves little to the imagination
Rolling Stone's record breaker 34-yr romance
Rolling Stone Keith Richards turned 74 on Monday, but he was more interested in celebrating his wedding anniversary.
Richards shared this picture on Instagram from his wedding to American model Patti Hansen in 1983, when she was 27. He wrote during their early relationship: ‘Incredibly, I’ve found a woman. Unbelievably, she is the most beautiful specimen in the WORLD . . . she thinks this battered junkie is the guy she loves . . . I’m kicking 40 and besotted.’
A 34th anniversary is a rare feat among The Stones. The group have had seven marriages and 20 children among them.
$400k Christmas bonus for jolly Bonham Carter
Helena Bonham Carter's company, Orlando Limited, has filed accounts stating it holds £7.245 million in funds, £400,000 increase on 2016
Christmas cheer for Helena Bonham Carter: her company, Orlando Limited, has filed accounts stating it holds £7.245 million in funds — a whopping £400,000 increase on 2016.
Bonham Carter, 51, has fashioned her career playing eccentrics such as The Red Queen in ex-partner Tim Burton’s Alice In Wonderland, Bellatrix Lestrange in the Harry Potter films and Miss Havisham in the 2012 adaptation of Great Expectations.
But Bonham Carter has spoken flippantly of her fortune, saying: ‘There’s a lot made of acting when, ultimately, you’re playing — you’re paid a lot of money just to play.’
If only charades were as lucrative.
David Cameron’s trainer, Matt Roberts, will join a panel of experts discussing healthy living at Annabel’s. The Mayfair nightspot has not often been linked with press-ups and circuit training. Cocktails and corner smooching are usually more like it. What on earth would well-refreshed regulars make of a lecture on lowering cholesterol?
David Beckham swapped the designer emporiums of Bond Street for a B&Q store near Banbury this week. The former footballer, who is overseeing the renovation of his £6 million barn conversion in the Cotswolds, was appropriately dressed for his visit to the DIY outlet. Local yokels described scruffy Becks as ‘dressed like a farmer’ and said he ‘looked like Worzel Gummidge’.
The post Mick Jagger's lover Melanie Hamrick features in racy snaps appeared first on News Wire Now.
Australia
Saudi women in Sydney: Sisters’ bodies lay undiscovered for a month

Australian police are baffled after the bodies of two Saudi women, believed to have lain undiscovered for a month, were found in a Sydney apartment.
Sisters Asra Abdullah Alsehli, 24, and Amaal Abdullah Alsehli, 23, were found dead on 7 June in separate beds at home in the suburb of Canterbury.
Police, who were called to the property for a welfare check, said the women are believed to have died in early May.
But despite “extensive inquiries”, they still do not know how or why.
The sisters moved to Australia from Saudi Arabia in 2017 and may have sought asylum, The Sydney Morning Herald reported. Police refused to confirm this, saying they do not comment on residential status.
A human rights organisation said it should be established whether the women fled Saudi Arabia because of domestic violence or harsh laws governing women. However, there is no evidence this is the case.
Police said they had been in contact with the women’s family, which is assisting them with inquiries.
Lina al-Hathloul, head of monitoring and communications at Saudi human rights organisation ALQST, said it “would not be the first case” of Saudi women who were killed abroad after fleeing domestic violence.
“There are no protections for women who are victims of domestic violence in Saudi Arabia, so they flee abroad,” she told the BBC.
She added: “I’m not saying that is the case here, just that we need a thorough investigation. It is frustrating not to have any information.”
According to the Sydney Morning Herald, there had been signs that something was wrong.
Last year, the women told their building manager they thought someone was tampering with their food deliveries, the paper reported.
A plumber who visited the apartment also said he believed there was “something mysterious” going on, and that police had been called in the past over concerns for the women.
New South Wales Police issued a renewed plea to the public on Wednesday, saying “any piece of information” could be the key to solving this case.
The local community is close-knit, police said in a statement, asking anyone who may have known or seen the women to come forward.
A report from Australian current affairs programme Four Corners in 2019 found 80 Saudi women had tried to seek asylum in Australia in recent years. Many of them were fleeing male guardianship laws.
Read from: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-62331116
Australia
Australia election: Why is Australia’s parliament so white?

Australia
Scott Morrison effectively ditches his promise to establish a federal anti-corruption commission

Scott Morrison has effectively abandoned his promise to establish a federal anti-corruption watchdog, confirming he would only proceed with legislation in the new parliament if Labor agreed to pass the Coalition’s heavily criticised proposal without amendments.
Morrison pledged before the 2019 election to legislate a federal integrity body in the parliamentary term that has just ended. The prime minister broke that promise, failing to introduce his own proposal before the 46th parliament was prorogued.
On the hustings on Wednesday, Morrison was asked – given his previous undertaking to create the body – whether he would promise to put his proposal to a vote in the next parliament in the event the Coalition won the 21 May election.
Morrison declined to make that promise. “Our position on this hasn’t changed,” the prime minister said. “Our view has been the same – when the Labor party is prepared to support that legislation in that form, then we will proceed with it.”
The prime minister has attempted to inoculate himself from criticism about breaking an election promise by saying he tabled the integrity commission proposal in the parliament.
Tabling an exposure draft, which is what the prime minister did, is not the same as introducing finished legislation to the House of Representatives or the Senate that is then debated and voted on.
As well as repeatedly fudging what happened in parliament, Morrison has also created the impression the proposal can only proceed if Labor agrees to its passage without amendments.
All governments routinely introduce legislation for debate without any undertaking that it will be passed by the opposition. Labor favours a stronger model than the Coalition’s proposal.
Morrison’s lack of urgency on the issue created tensions within government ranks. Late last year, the Tasmanian Liberal MP Bridget Archer crossed the floor to support independent MP Helen Haines’ bill to establish a federal integrity commission. Archer accused the government of “inertia” over the issue.
At that time, Archer said she was “perplexed” at her own government’s failure to release a revised bill almost three years after it was promised before the last election.
While Morrison clearly wants to move on from the issue, he will face renewed pressure from crossbench independents if the coming election is close enough to deliver a hung parliament.
A number of independents running against Liberals in metropolitan seats have made it clear that establishing a credible national integrity commission will be a key demand in the event any new government – Liberal or Labor – is seeking agreements for confidence and supply.
Haines blasted Morrison’s comments on Wednesday. “Mr Morrison broke an election promise to introduce an anti-corruption commission and his pathway to creating one is still as vague as it was in the last parliament,” she said.
The crossbench independent said it was “nonsense” for the prime minister to claim that he could not proceed unless Labor agreed with the Coalition’s proposal without seeking any amendments. “It would appear we are in the same void as we were before,” Haines said.
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