Eight children have
been found dead at a house in Cairns in northern Queensland, say Australian
police.
Police said a
34-year-old woman who was the mother of at least seven of the children had been
taken to hospital with stab wounds but was stable.
Police have not
confirmed Australian reports that the children, aged between 18 months and 15
years, were stabbed.
Australian Prime
Minister Tony Abbott said in a statement it was an "unspeakable
crime".
He said all parents
would feel "gut-wrenching sadness at what has happened".
The house in the
Manoora suburb has been cordoned off and detectives are searching the yard.
Police have said it
was a "tragic event" but there was no cause for public concern.
They have not made any
arrests, but said the injured woman was assisting with their investigations.
Cairns Detective
Inspector Bruno Asnicar confirmed to reporters that the woman was the mother of
at least seven of the children, but that formal identification of the bodies
had not yet taken place.
"We believe the
other child is a family member but that is being followed up," he said.
He said police could
not confirm how the children died until coroners' reports were carried out.
Police are speaking to
a range of people, he said, including a man seen near the house earlier in the
day, but there are as yet no formal suspects.
Specialist police
officers were being brought in from Brisbane, he said, including child trauma
experts.
Residents were standing in the street in
shock.
| Police investigators are scouring the house for evidence |
Queensland Police said
in a statement earlier that they were called to a residence in Murray
Street at 11.20 local time (01:20 GMT) following reports of a woman with
serious injuries.
"During an
examination of the residence police located the bodies of the children, all
aged between 18 months and 15 years," said the statement.
Local people have told
reporters that the children were found by their elder sibling, a 20-year-old
man, when he returned to the house, but police have not confirmed this.
| Local people have gathered outside in shock |
Queensland Premier
Campbell Newman said he was "deeply saddened and shocked" by the
events.
"Indeed, the
whole Cairns community and the people of Queensland will feel the effects of
this tragedy, particularly at a time of year when families come together."
The deaths come with
Australia still reeling from the siege of a cafe in Sydney which ended on
Tuesday morning, with the gunman and two hostages dead.
| Floral tributes have been left outside the house by mourners |
Mr Abbott said in his
statement that these were "trying days for our country".
Several police and
governmental investigations are under way into the police operation and how the
gunman, Man Haron Monis, was able to carry out the attack.
Monis was on bail at
the time of the attack after being charged with sexual assaults and being an
accessory to the murder of his wife.
The New South Wales
Bar Association president Jane Needham said on Friday that lawyers who
represented him and the magistrate who granted him bail have received death
threats.
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