8 Children killed in Australia

The mother of seven of the eight children found dead in a house in the northeastern Australian city of Cairns has been arrested on suspicion of murder, police Detective Inspector Bruno Asnicar said.
The 37-year-old woman is under police guard at a hospital and in stable condition, he said at a news conference.
The discovery of the bodies added to a traumatic week for Australia after a deadly hostage-taking in Sydney.
Police said they were called to the suburban house in the Manoora area of Cairns on Friday morning after reports of an injured woman.
Inside, officers found the bodies of eight children between the ages of 18 months and 14 years, police said.
The eighth child killed was a niece of the woman, Asnicar said.
"They're only babies," Lisa Thaiday, a relative of the family, told said.
She further said the horrendous scene had been discovered by a 20-year-old brother of the children.
"He got off the bus and he found his mother and siblings," she said.
Police said Saturday they talked to the 20-year-old but that he is not a suspect.
It was reported that the children were part of the local community of Torres Strait Islanders, an indigenous people from the region.
Australian media reported that at least some of the victims were believed to have been stabbed. But Asnicar declined to confirm that, saying police are waiting for autopsy reports.
Images from the scene showed distraught neighbors gathered near the area cordoned off around the one-story house, where Christmas decorations were still hanging in the front window.
The road where the house is situated has been blocked off and the crime scene locked down while forensic experts carry out their work, police said.
Specialist police officers will also be arriving from Brisbane, another city in Queensland, Asnicar said.
"This is not a small job. We're not taking this lightly at all," he told reporters. "We will cover every angle before this is finished."
A neighbor of the house where the bodies were found said the family who lived there had always been very quiet. She told The Cairns Post that she'd heard no noise from the house Friday as she sat in her front room until the sudden burst of police sirens.
Another neighbor, Patricia Birch, said she heard some arguments on the property around 10 a.m., but she agreed the family wasn't known for causing problems.
"They never annoyed us," she told The Cairns Post. "They were really good."