The 47-year-old, who played 60 tests for the Wallabies around
the turn of the century, was taken to hospital with three other
members of his household after the incident in the south of the
city, the Australian Broadcasting Corp reported.
Police were investigating offences of burglary and attempted
murder from the alleged attack which left Kefu's wife and two of
his children injured, the ABC said.
Queensland Police found a knife, axe and machete at the
household and said a man in his 40s had "serious injuries".
"His initial condition was described as critical, but expected
to survive," Detective Superintendent Fleming told Australian
media.
"The mother has suffered very, very serious lacerations to her
arm and I'm told her wounds are very significant."
The ABC said Kefu's 21-year-old son had sustained significant
wounds to his arm and back, and one of his daughters had cuts to
her hand and arm.
"I can only imagine this will have a lasting effect on this
family due to the trauma of what's happened," Fleming said.
"It is highly likely a burglary that has gone wrong."
Police said they had taken two 15-year-old boys into custody.
One was arrested after being apprehended by a neighbour and
another was under police guard at a local hospital after he
presented there with cuts.
Police were searching for a third male involved.
They said one of the family members had woken to noise at about
3:15 a.m. and went to investigate.
The person was threatened that he would be stabbed if he did not
hand over car keys.
Other family members "suffered very significant injuries" as
they came to the person's aid, said police.
Number eight Kefu was a mainstay of the Wallabies pack during
the later part of Australian rugby's golden era, helping his
adopted country win the 1999 World Cup and hold onto the
Bledisloe Cup for five successive years.
He coached Tonga at the 2019 Rugby World Cup finals, where they
won one of four matches, and was reappointed to the job earlier
this year.
News of the incident stunned Australian and Pacific rugby
communities.
"Thoughts and Prayers are with my Tongan brother Toutai Kefu &
his family," former New Zealand midfielder Sonny Bill Williams
wrote on Twitter.
"You got this great man!! All our love and thoughts to you and
the entire Kefu family!" the Wallabies' Twitter account said.
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney in Sydney and Ian Ransom in
Melbourne, editing by Richard Pullin)
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