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Australia: Victorian Plane Crash Victims Identified

‘Unhealthy Partisanship’: Move Afoot to Improve the Workings of Parliament

Canada’s Parliament is increasingly moving away from forming decisions based on debates, with decisions instead largely dictated by parties or party leaders, says a veteran MP. A recent report backs up this view, showing the majority of MPs believe that “unhealthy partisanship” has become more prevalent in Parliament, with democratic practices declining, particularly in the areas of MP independence and debates. In the current minority Parliament, some MPs are working toward modernizing the House in order to increase efficiency and eliminate parliamentary dysfunction, among other issues that have long plagued the legislative body. Engaged in the discussions is Conservative MP Michael Chong, who has been committed to democratic reform ever since he was elected in 2004. In his view, Parliament has increasingly gravitated toward conformity to the point that new…

Australia: Victorian Plane Crash Victims Identified

The ages and suburbs of three men and a woman killed when their two light planes crashed mid-air in regional Victoria have been released.

The two training flights crashed mid-air near Mangalore Airport at about 11.30 a.m. on Wednesday.

Emergency services found the planes a few kilometers (few miles) from each other, and the bodies of the three men and woman in the wreckage.

A Melbourne West woman, 27, and a 79-year-old man from Maiden Gully, in Bendigo, were killed after leaving Mangalore Airport, police said on Thursday.

A Cheltenham man, 30, and a Seaford man, 47, who left from Tyabb airport also died.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry said in a statement to local media that among the dead was an Israeli national, who’s been named by The Jerusalem Post as Ido Segev.

“We are working with the family during this difficult time, and we are helping them with everything related to bringing the deceased back to Israel for burial,” the ministry said.

The Israeli Embassy has been contacted for comment.

Tributes have flowed online for Mr Segev.

“Our beloved Ido Segev is no longer with us. He will be remembered by all of us, worldwide,” Adi Kochav posted on social media.

Segev has had connections with the Peninsula Aero Club for years and in December 2016 it posted a photo on social media congratulating him on completing formation endorsement.

It is understood he and another man were on a privately-owned Beechcraft Travel Air D95A operated by the Peninsula Aero Club at Tyabb.

The pair were qualified instructors conducting a training flight, club president Jack Vevers said.

The Civil Aviation Safety Authority said the other plane was a Piper Seminole twin-engine registered to Moorabbin Aviation Services, also on a training flight.

Mitchell Local Area Commander Inspector Peter Koger said witnesses saw the planes collide and one aircraft coming down.

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews told reporters on Thursday it was a “very, very, very sad” incident and authorities would find the exact cause of the crash.

“We have not seen an incident like this for a long time and these are very serious matters and they will be investigated thoroughly,” Mr Andrews said.

“If there’s any learnings, any changes that need to be made then of course – not just the state government, this is a shared responsibility with the national government – I’m sure people won’t hesitate to act.”

It’s believed one of the planes had taken off from the Mangalore Airport shortly before the crash.

CASA and the Australian Transport Safety Bureau are investigating.

ATSB investigators from Melbourne, Canberra, and Brisbane are going to the site to look at the wreckage and surrounding area.

“The investigators that are deploying to the accident site have experience in human factors, aircraft operations, and maintenance,” ATSB Transport Safety executive director Nat Nagy said.

The ATSB will also analyze available recorded data, review weather information, and interview witnesses.

By Christine McGinn

This article is from the Internet:Australia: Victorian Plane Crash Victims Identified

Shaking Hands With Bad State Actors Not Smart ‘Chess’

News Analysis Diplomatic relations is a chess game, one that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau didn’t play very well when he had a friendly handshake with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, says former cabinet minister and longtime MP David Kilgour. “You need to know how to move your pieces in a way that you’re going to serve your country and its interests, and not serve the interests of the other country, which is trying to hurt you in every way it can,” Kilgour says. Images of Trudeau greeting Zarif with a friendly handshake and bowing his head on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference on Feb. 14 was shared widely by Iranian state media, with critics raising concerns that the prime minister is being used as a propaganda prop by…