News: Group of Australian babysitter look for news of her


The Latest on the assaults in the London Bridge zone (all circumstances neighborhood): 1:30 p.m. Relatives of a 21-year-old Australian caretaker who is lost in London after the London Bridge assaults are arguing for data and raising cash to fly her folks to Britain.

Sara Zelenak's mom Julie Wallace revealed to Brisbane radio station 97.3FM that the family had wanted to meet Sara in Europe soon. "We were checking during the time to see her," Wallace said. "The last time I addressed her was our time Friday evening at 4:42 and she stated, 'Goodness mum! It's just 28 days until you and I and father can have baguettes and cheddar and croissants in Paris."


A lady named Tara who distinguished herself as Sara Zelenak's close relative said the family seems to be "supporting for the most exceedingly bad." Speaking to media Tuesday outside the family's home in Ormiston in eastern Australia, the auntie called Zelenak an "exceptional, related soul."



London police said Australian lady Kirsty Boden was among the seven murdered, and the Australian government affirmed that two Australians are among the harmed. Australia's executive says authorities are attempting to attempt to discover what happened to Zelenak.

Reconnaissance video from a bar in Borough Market acquired by nearby Spanish daily paper Diario de Pontevedra demonstrates the minute when one of the aggressors in Saturday's assault is obstructed from getting to a stuffed bar minutes before he was shot by the police.



The camera caught how staff at the Arthur Hooper's bar shielded clients and different passers-by as the assault unfurled, the daily paper said. As different individuals attempt to cut off the passageway, supervisor Sergio Farina can be seen wrestling the entryway against one of the aggressors who is attempting to charge against it.

"The police opened discharged when one individual was cut," Farina told the daily paper, including that the attacker was shot by the police a couple meters far from the bar's passage.

The director's sibling, Rafael, a journalist with Diario de Pontevedra, told the AP that 28 individuals were shielded that night in the bar. He said his sibling, who has lived in London for a long time, was more stunned about the occasions than glad for his activity. "My sibling wouldn't like to be a saint, he quite recently did what anyone would do," said Rafael Farina.

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