Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said in a statement that it had also responded to the "mass casualty" incident, and that the blood bank at Nasser hospital, where the injured were treated, was almost empty, with medical staff donating blood themselves to help the injured.
In 2022, Cauchi was reported to police after calling a girl's school to ask if he could come and watch the students swim and play sports. Officers tried to call Cauchi but weren't able to reach him.In January 2023, Cauchi had moved back in with his parents in Toowoomba and called police to complain that his father had stolen his collection of "pigging knives". At this time, his mother raised concerns with the officers, saying he should be back on medication.
Authorities can't detain people for mental health reasons unless they are a risk to themselves and as the officers had assessed Cauchi did not meet that description, they left, the court heard.After the call-out, one of the attending police officers sent an email to an internal police mental health coordinator, requesting they follow up on Cauchi. However, the email was overlooked due to understaffing, the inquest was told.Months later, police in Sydney found Cauchi sleeping rough near a road after being called by a concerned passerby.
By 2024 Cauchi's mental health had deteriorated, he was homeless, and isolated from his family.The inquest looked closely at Cauchi's mental health treatment in Queensland, with a panel of five psychiatrists tasked with reviewing it.
They found that Dr Boros-Lavack had missed opportunities to put him back on anti-psychotic medication, one member of the panel saying she had "not taken seriously enough" the concerns from Cauchi's mother in late-2019.
The panel also gave evidence at the inquest that Cauchi was "floridly psychotic" - in the active part of a psychotic episode – when he walked into the shopping centre.The waxwork later reappeared outside the Russian embassy, where activists denounced Macron's attitude towards French companies that continue to do business with Russia since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Macron has been one of Kyiv's most vocal supporters and has been a leading figure in European efforts to secure a ceasefire.Footage showed activists placing the waxwork in front of the embassy alongside signs and placards.
No arrests have been made and the waxwork, worth a reported €40,000 (£33,765; $45,674), has not yet been recovered.Jean-Francois Julliard, head of Greenpeace France, told AFP that Paris was "playing a double game" in supporting Ukraine while allowing French companies to continue with gas and fertiliser imports from Russia.