Author: admin

  • Aunty’s Free Feeds volunteers serving free meals from Palmerston car park

    Aunty’s Free Feeds volunteers serving free meals from Palmerston car park

    Every Saturday morning, 55-year-old Sally King happily makes the hour-long return trip from her home in Palmerston to a supermarket in Darwin, rescuing food from an alternative route to landfill. 

    Returning home with her ute stacked with groceries, Sally then starts unloading crates of fresh produce into a heavily air-conditioned room.

    Her home is quickly transformed into a makeshift distribution centre for the mutual-aid kitchen Sally organises over Facebook.

    Sally King, left, says “there is a sense of camaraderie” between Aunty’s Free Feeds volunteers. (ABC News: Sam Parry)

    For almost six years, Aunty’s Free Feeds has been serving home-cooked meals to anybody who needs them from a pop-up buffet in the car park of a Palmerston swimming pool.

    “No matter whether it’s rain, hail or shine, we turn up at the pool and we just give out whatever we’ve got,” Sally says.

    The concept was founded by local Reanna-Dawn Sanders, who launched the program with a simple menu of sausages and bread, explains Sally.

    “She is the original Aunty and the rest of us just consider ourselves the adopted aunts,” she says.

    Four women pass foil-covered platters to each other as they organise a table.

    The meals on offer at Aunty’s Free Feeds depends on avaliability of ingredients and “volunteers’ skill set”. (ABC News: Sam Parry)

    Pop-up buffet in pool car park

    By 4:50pm on Sunday afternoon, a bleak and shadeless car park in Palmerston rapidly transforms as volunteers set up trestle tables and trays of food.

    The team is well practised in bumping in this efficient operation, which often feeds over 150 people.

    From roast chicken to stews, salads and desserts, the colourful line-up is a welcome sight in a part of outer suburban Darwin where many are doing it tough.

    A line of people at a makeshift buffet. Behind the buffet people wear yellow vests.

    Volunteers “take a bit of pride” in helping others in an informal way. (ABC News: Sam Parry)

    The types of meals on offer “will depend on the volunteers’ skill set”, Sally explains, adding that the availability of ingredients also dictates the weekly menu.

    “Some people can make something out of almost nothing,” she says.

    This week’s offering includes a savory mince dish with edible gourds, after the group received a bulk donation of the squash-like vegetable.

    “We do have a couple of people who will regularly give us a cash donation, and we mainly use that to buy ingredients for the volunteers to then make other food,” Sally says.

    People help themselves to trays of food. Volunteers in bright jackets hand them out.

    Aunty’s Free Feeds serves up home-cooked meals to anybody who needs them. (ABC News: Sam Parry)

    ‘Severe food insecurity’ rife

    According to Foodbank’s 2025 Hunger Report, released last month, one in three Australian households experienced food insecurity in the past year, with cost of living the “number one concern” for 87 per cent of homes.

    One in five Australian households experienced “severe food insecurity”, defined as skipping meals or whole days of eating, in the year up to July 2025.

    It’s a 1 per cent increase on the previous year.

    A woman wearing a yellow vent smiles as she unpacks food from the car.

    Sally King says “it’s really important to give back”. (ABC News: Sam Parry)

    Moulden resident Sharlene Keegan says without the meal service, she would struggle to make ends meet.

    “It helps tie up loose ends and basic needs, and getting a feed every week is really good,” Ms Keegan says.

    “It has helped me a lot with my health and made me a lot better.”

    A woman smiles as she holds up trays of food in front of a buffet line.

    Sharlene Keegan says without Aunty’s Free Feeds she’d be forced to skip meals. (ABC News: Sam Parry)

    Regular volunteer Greg Steunebrink says the benefits of Aunty’s Free Feeds have flowed to his family, too.

    “It’s just really been a way of life for the past six years,” he says.

    And look at my kids — they’re doing it in the rain — and there’s not a better way to raise your kids than to let them know that serving is a good way of life.

    ‘A little community’ of aunties

    While Sally is open to the idea of Aunty’s Free Feeds partnering with a registered charity to access more funding, she says there is a sense of camaraderie that comes with being a smaller outfit, and the informal charity has become “its own little community within itself”.

    A woman smiles as she serves food outside in the rain.

    Rain or shine, volunteers such as Lorraine Phillips hand out meals to those who need them. (ABC News: Sam Parry)

    “We’re not unregulated, but we’re a casual organisation, and so I think we also take a bit of pride in just being a group of volunteers who just want to help other people,” she says.

    “We have a little chat group, and the volunteers will often talk about how they love the like-mindedness of the other volunteers.

    It doesn’t matter how and it doesn’t even have to be at Christmas, it’s just really important to give back.

    Continue Reading

  • United Nations. The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2024 (New York, 2024).

  • Janik-Karpinska, E. et al. Healthc. Waste—A Serious Problem Global Health Healthc. 11(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11020242 (2023).

  • Abosse, J. S., Megersa,…

Continue Reading

  • London Tech Week 2026 Opens Registration and Announces First Speakers

    London Tech Week 2026 Opens Registration and Announces First Speakers

    Insider Brief

    • London Tech Week 2026 has opened registration for its 8–10 June event at Olympia London, positioning itself as a major European forum on AI, quantum, deep tech, and frontier innovation.
    • Organizers announced the first wave of global speakers across AI, quantum, robotics, biotech, and enterprise technology, alongside Microsoft and AWS as headline partners.
    • The 2026 edition introduces a redesigned structure with separate Enterprise and Startup “Worlds,” an expanded VIP programme, and new interactive formats including hackathons.

    PRESS RELEASE — Registration for London Tech Week 2026 is now open, marking the launch of Europe’s most influential technology gathering, taking place 8 – 10 June 2026 at Olympia London. The campus will host tech’s most influential figures, including leading founders, enterprise leaders, investors and policymakers from around the world, at a pivotal moment for Europe’s technological future.

    Against a backdrop of rapid advances in AI, quantum, deep tech and frontier innovation, the next ten years will shape Europe’s competitiveness, resilience and ability to lead on the global stage. London Tech Week will provide one of the central forums for insight, debate and collaboration on the critical issues facing the continent’s tech ecosystem.

    The 2025 edition welcomed more than 30,000 attendees from 128 countries, including 12,500 enterprise leaders, 5,500 startup attendees and over 1,000 investors. With attendees from enterprise CIOs and unicorn founders, to global investors and policymakers, London Tech Week has built a reputation as a globally significant platform.

    First Wave of Global Speakers & Headline Partners Announced

    London Tech Week also today unveiled its first confirmed speakers for 2026, highlighting preeminent European and global voices in AI, robotics, quantum computing, biotech, and frontier science. Learn from most influential figures about what’s capturing their attention and where they are placing their bets, including:

    • Mati Staniszewski, Co-Founder & CEO, 
    • ElevenLabs Anton Osika, Co-Founder & CEO, Lovable
    • Alan Chang, Co-Founder & CEO, Fuse Energy
    • Alex Kendall, Founder & CEO, Wayve
    • Jeannette Zu Furstenburg, Managing Director & Head of Europe, General Catalyst
    • Luca Ferrari, Co-Founder & CEO, Bending Spoons
    • Tom Hale, CEO, ŌURA
    • Will Marshall, Founder & CEO, Planet
    • Toyin Ajayi, Co-Founder, Cityblock Health
    • Max Junestrand, Co-Founder & CEO, Legora
    • Professor Sarah Tabrizi, Director, UCL Huntington’s Disease Centre
    • Alex Zhavoronkov, Founder & CEO, Insilico Medicine

    Furthermore, London Tech Week 2026 Headline Partners are Microsoft and AWS reflecting deep industry support for the event. They will also shape a week dedicated to showcasing the technologies, ideas and leaders redefining the future of business.

    “Europe has entered a Decisive Decade for technology innovation, and London Tech Week 2026 will bring together the most influential figures shaping that future,” said Carolyn Dawson OBE, CEO of Founders Forum Group. “Our focus this year is on practical, real-world innovation. The UK and Europe’s ability to be competitive in technology requires founders, industry leaders, investors, talent and policymakers to come together, tackle the barriers, and create the opportunities for innovators to scale into global leaders. We’re curating everything in one place so attendees can discover new ideas, touch, test and interrogate the tech that’s reshaping our world, and learn what works in practice.”

    What’s New for 2026?

    For 2026, London Tech Week has been redesigned to deliver deeper, more focused engagement for the global technology ecosystem. Key enhancements include:

    A New Event Architecture – Two Worlds

    To deliver a personalised experience to delegates, the programme is now organised into:

    Enterprise World

    • AI Arena – this is London Tech Week’s flagship stage hosting the biggest names in global tech including Visionaries shaping AI, real-world applied AI, and enterprise transformation at scale
    • Core Stage – focused on developments in compute, cloud, connectivity, quantum and infrastructure
    • Transformation Stage – exploring how technology is reshaping critical sectors and enterprise functions, focusing on finance, sales and marketing, and customer operations

    Startup World

    • Deep Tech Stage – exploring advances in space, robotics, materials, life sciences, national security.
    • Founders Stage – visionary entrepreneurs sharing their journeys and lessons learned in building from the ground up to Unicorn scale.
    • Ignition Stage – showcasing the next generation of startups and scale-ups transforming the world; will also host Tech Nation’s grand pitch competition finale

    Expanded VIP Programme

    A significantly enhanced VIP experience will convene a large and curated group of C-suite leaders, including CIOs, CTOs, CAIOs and CDAOs, for high-value networking, closed-door roundtables, private briefings and curated 1:1 meetings.

    New Interactive Formats

    For the first time, London Tech Week will introduce hackathons – of which more will be announced in the coming months. As well as the return of popular invite-only events including the Investor Forum (for VC/CVC audiences only) and the C-Suite AI Strategy Forum.

    Tech Industry Leaders on London Tech Week

    London Tech Week is the forum for bold, visionary leaders shaping ideas and the future. Darren Hardman, Microsoft UK CEO, in his London Tech Week 2025 Main Stage keynote, said: “Talent – not just technology – will decide which nations lead in the AI era.” He described AI as “the defining opportunity of our generation” that was “fundamentally transforming how we work, how we live, and how we dream – on an unprecedented scale.”

    Meanwhile, Tanuja Randery, AWS Managing Director, EMEA in her London Tech Week 2025 keynote, emphasised AI’s transformative potential for Europe. She highlighted London Tech Week as a key gathering for “the brightest, most creative and learning-oriented minds” reimagining the future through AI innovation – positioning the event as central to fostering a culture of invention. 

    Registration is now open — London Tech Week 2026 is welcoming delegates, founders, investors and technology leaders to now register for passes, with limited early-bird pricing available. You can visit the link to register today: www.londontechweek.com

    Continue Reading

  • The pope urges the faithful on Christmas to shed indifference in the face of suffering

    The pope urges the faithful on Christmas to shed indifference in the face of suffering

    Pope Leo XIV waves Thursday after delivering the Urbi et Orbi (Latin for ‘to the city and to the world’ ) Christmas blessing from the main balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican.

    Gregorio Borgia / AP

    Pope Leo XIV during his first Christmas…

    Continue Reading

  • Entertainer Kamahl, now 91, reflects on life, career spanning 70 years

    Entertainer Kamahl, now 91, reflects on life, career spanning 70 years

    As Kamahl puts the final touches to what will likely be his last spoken word recording, to be released next year, the entertainer is reflecting on a career spent preaching the gospel of kindness and love.

    At 91, the Sydney-based Australian…

    Continue Reading

  • New plant-based serum shown to regrow hair in weeks

    New plant-based serum shown to regrow hair in weeks

    A team of scientists has created a daily scalp hair growth serum, using a tropical plant-based extract, that has proven to regrow hair and improve hair thickness in just 56 days.

    The test enrolled 60 adults in a randomized, double-blind trial run…

    Continue Reading

  • Pope Leo XIV delivers his first Christmas Day message

    Pope Leo XIV delivers his first Christmas Day message

    VATICAN CITY — VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Leo XIV during his first Christmas Day message on Thursday urged the faithful to shed indifference in the face of those who have lost everything, such as in Gaza, those who are impoverished, such as in…

    Continue Reading

  • Traders seek transparent wheat subsidy system

    Traders seek transparent wheat subsidy system


    KARACHI:

    Small traders of Hyderabad have expressed concern over the emerging…

    Continue Reading

  • Women and girls coming to the crease in more numbers at regional Victorian cricket clubs

    Women and girls coming to the crease in more numbers at regional Victorian cricket clubs

    Gippsland’s Gaby Hynes can recall the moment she decided she was going to play cricket for Australia. 

    “I was young. I remember dad was playing, and I was tying one of his shoes,” she said. 

    “It’s on this day I chose that I wanted to play…

    Continue Reading

  • ctDNA Tumor-Informed vs Agnostic Testing in CRC Recurrence

    ctDNA Tumor-Informed vs Agnostic Testing in CRC Recurrence

    ctDNA (Circulating tumor DNA) has emerged as a key tool for detecting molecular residual disease after curative surgery in early-stage colorectal cancer, often identifying recurrence months before radiologic relapse and informing…

    Continue Reading