A commercial airline flight from Australia to Malaysia returned to Sydney on Monday after an emergency incident, officials and media reported. Malaysia Airlines flight MH122 left Sydney Airport at 1:40 pm for an eight-hour flight to Kuala Lumpur and landed back on the runway at 3:47 pm, Nine News reported. Someone purporting to be on board tweeted that a person was threatening staff and passengers, Nine reported. It said a passenger holding a backpack had threatened to blow the plane up. Crew had checked the backpack and found no explosives, it added. Australian Federal Police said in a statement they were responding to an emergency incident at the airport, but provided no other details. The plane was parked on the end of a runway hours later with emergency vehicles nearby, Nine reported. Sydney Airport said it was supporting emergency agencies in the management of an incident. The airport is operational with flights arriving and departing, an airport statement said.
India vs Netherlands T20 World Cup 2022 Live Streaming: As India play its second game of the campaign, the tie can be live streamed on Disney Plus Hotstar and will be telecast on Star Sports network
On the fifth day of the flood emergency, Perrottet warned that homes that remained dry during previous floods could be inundated this week
Australia ended Day One at 166/2 in 55 overs that could be bowled because of rain. At Stumps, Labuschagne and Steve Smith remained unbeaten on 67 and 31
India made a solid start with Rohit Sharma (26) and Shubman Gill (50) stitching a 70-run opening stand. Gill went on to score his maiden half-century
There is a forecast of rainfall in the first two days of India vs Australia third Test
The curator confirmed that the Test match won't get affected as the clouds are expected to pass
The mega fire north of Sydney, Australia's largest city, was created on Friday when several fires merged and was now burning across 335,000 hectares
Richmond reached 46.3 degrees Celsius, while the temperature in Bankstown exceeded 45 degrees Celsius