Sydney’s $15 Billion New Train Line Is Modern, Fast and Big on TikTok 

Commuters walk at Victoria Cross Station on the new Sydney Metro line in Sydney, Australia, August 25, 2024. (Reuters)
Commuters walk at Victoria Cross Station on the new Sydney Metro line in Sydney, Australia, August 25, 2024. (Reuters)
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Sydney’s $15 Billion New Train Line Is Modern, Fast and Big on TikTok 

Commuters walk at Victoria Cross Station on the new Sydney Metro line in Sydney, Australia, August 25, 2024. (Reuters)
Commuters walk at Victoria Cross Station on the new Sydney Metro line in Sydney, Australia, August 25, 2024. (Reuters)

Australia's largest public transport project has achieved something few urban planners expect: social media fame.

The A$21.6 billion ($15 billion) Sydney Metro line along a major north-southwest artery has featured in hundreds of photos and videos on TikTok and Instagram since it opened in late August.

In one TikTok video viewed more than 600,000 times, young people dance and celebrate on the train station platform holding Sydney Metro signs.

The excitement is in part a response to how modern the new line, with its driverless trains and bright, spacious stations, feels compared to the aging network in which tens of thousands of commuters pour through every day.

At the heart of the new line is Sydney Central, which got A$955 million overhaul to accommodate the new underground line and elevate the 118-year old station to the level of Kings Cross in London or Grand Central in New York.

"It's not something Sydney has really experienced, it's been a bit overdue," said John Prentice, a principal at architecture and design firm Woods Bagot, who led the design of Sydney Central.

"We wanted to provide Sydney a station on par with stations around the world. It needed to rival those other stations but based on its unique qualities and characteristics."

At Gadigal, a new station next to the pre-World War Two city hub Town Hall, commuters descend to the platform on escalators flanked by six columns weighing 168 tons each.

Large murals of train tunnels stand high above commuters at each entrance. The 12.5 meter (14 yard) tall pieces drew inspiration from early Sydney railway tunnels as well those drawn by cartoon character Wile E. Coyote, according to artist Callum Morton.

"You can always tell when something hits," he told Reuters.

"The beauty is on the surface and the sensation you feel in front of it is the most captivating thing... I really wanted to reproduce that feeling."



Indonesia Arrests Man for Selling Rhino Horn Via Social Media

A white rhinoceros calf stands next to its mother Nola at Lunaret Zoo in Montpellier July 31, 2024. (Photo by Sylvain THOMAS / AFP)
A white rhinoceros calf stands next to its mother Nola at Lunaret Zoo in Montpellier July 31, 2024. (Photo by Sylvain THOMAS / AFP)
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Indonesia Arrests Man for Selling Rhino Horn Via Social Media

A white rhinoceros calf stands next to its mother Nola at Lunaret Zoo in Montpellier July 31, 2024. (Photo by Sylvain THOMAS / AFP)
A white rhinoceros calf stands next to its mother Nola at Lunaret Zoo in Montpellier July 31, 2024. (Photo by Sylvain THOMAS / AFP)

Indonesian authorities arrested a man trying to sell elephant tusks and the horns of critically endangered rhinos via social media.

The illegal wildlife trade remains rampant in Indonesia, where law enforcement is lax, but the arrested man could face up to 15 years in prison if convicted, the environmental ministry said in a statement late Wednesday.

South Sumatra police began an investigation after seeing posts on Facebook earlier this year offering parts of protected wildlife for sale, AFP reported.

A 60-year-old man, identified only by the initials "ZA", was arrested last week during a transaction while trying to sell a rhino horn and a pipe made of an elephant tusk in Palembang, South Sumatra.

Police found seven more rhino horns and at least four elephant tusks at his house.

"It seems like he's very experienced in wildlife trading," the environmental ministry said.

In June police arrested a gang of poachers suspected of killing 26 critically endangered Javan rhinos in Ujung Kulon National Park since 2018.

They once numbered in the thousands across Southeast Asia, but have been hard hit by rampant poaching and human encroachment on their habitat, and the environment ministry says there are only around 80 of the beasts left in the wild.

Sumatran rhinos have also been declared critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature or IUCN with fewer than 50 remaining.