Category: World

  • Normally this column focuses on the agenda for the coming pa…

    Normally this column focuses on the agenda for the coming pa…

    Normally this column focuses on the agenda for the coming parliamentary week, unpacking a dense policy issue or two that will dominate the political discussion.

    This week is a little different. You would expect the government’s big agenda would be front and centre in the first regularly scheduled programming sitting week of the year – but not this Monday.

    Partly because, as of the time of writing, we know little about how the government plans to use its parliamentary superiority in 2026. But partly because, once again, all eyes will be on the Coalition – or lack thereof – as the opposition once again finds itself plumbing new depths.

    Who will sit on the frontbenches of the new Liberal-only opposition? How bare will those benches look? Are the Liberals and Nationals getting back together, or is their split more long-term? And with at least one party-room spill called for Monday, who will be in their leadership positions to start the week – let alone by the end?

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    Reduced from an already paltry 42 opposition members, the desertion of the 14 Nationals from the Coalition leaves Sussan Ley with an anemic 28 votes on her side of the chamber – herself included.

    Angus Taylor will be the spectre hanging over the Liberals all week, with even Ley’s backers privately saying they expect a leadership challenge before the sitting fortnight is out. Waiting any longer would risk the Coalition chaos dissipating, allowing Ley’s interim arrangements to be formalised, and giving challengers less of a foothold to launch their coup.

    David Littleproud faces a leadership challenge on Monday afternoon, which he’s expected to win, and there’s a chance he and Ley will meet before parliament on Tuesday to stitch the Coalition back together. But if that doesn’t happen, and the Liberals begin Tuesday with their current 28 members, it’ll be the barest opposition benches since the 1943 election – the year before the Liberal party formed. That time, the United Australia party and Country party combined for just 23 seats.

    If there’s a leadership spill, it’s anyone’s guess who ends up in the opposition’s big chair

    That, of course, was in a much smaller chamber of only 74 seats in the old Parliament House; the new House, opened in 1988, has never seen an official opposition as small as the Liberal-only one likely to trudge in on Tuesday. Unless the Liberals practise Covid-style social distancing, leaving spare seats and gaps, Ley will barely be able to fill the benches behind her in the chamber. There will be ample space for her senior team to spread out leisurely on the frontbench, at least, with extra room for the briefing notes for their new acting responsibilities.

    Ted O’Brien finds himself in the silly situation of being shadow treasurer, and also the assistant shadow treasurer. Meetings of the Coalition’s economic team may end up like the Spider-Man pointing at Spider-Man meme, or Bernard Black co-writing a book with himself, but at least O’Brien being his own assistant may make them run a little more smoothly.

    It leaves 28 Liberals, and 28 crossbenchers. It wouldn’t ever happen, but mathematically there’s a fantasy football scenario where a loose Nationals-teals-Greens-One Nation-Bob Katter-independents alliance makes a play to be recognised as the official opposition.

    Expect all these things to be ridiculed, relentlessly, by Labor in question time. We can almost hear the backbenchers delivering stilted dixer questions to various ministers about the “stability” of the government, and asking curiously about “any other approaches”. On Sunday, the health minister, Mark Butler, called it a “shambles”.

    The week will be a storm of leadership questions, impromptu doorstops from rarely seen Liberal or National backbenchers, and the staking out of offices, restaurants and bars to try to spot more meetings of Angus Taylor backers – or Pauline Hanson cooking steak dinners for any One Nation-curious conservative defectors.

    But while the emergency sitting week in January was a flurry of activity, negotiations and passage of complicated responses to antisemitism and the Bondi terror attack, the current legislation list for this week’s sitting looks a little more muted.

    Subject to change, the parliament will debate an in-the-weeds bill on copyright, excises on draught beer and fees in the Corporations Act. Other more consequential bills on migrant exploitation, the commonwealth Parole Board and veterans affairs are also scheduled.

    There is also a suggestion the government’s controversial changes to freedom of information legislation, including setting higher charges for documents and dramatically curbing access to government data, could return to the parliamentary agenda in coming weeks.

    For a Labor government that has claimed to be among the most transparent in history, to oversee major downgrades to the already-broken FoI system – based on claims, questionable at best, about AI flooding their systems – would be an alarming wielding of its parliamentary muscle.

    The bill passed the lower house, but was pulled from the Senate agenda late last year, though government sources say it remains alive. Speaking to my colleague Tom McIlroy this week, the shadow attorney general, Andrew Wallace, called it “friendless” and “a dog” of a bill, but conceded “never say never” when asked if the Coalition could back it.

    Of course if there’s a leadership spill, it’s anyone’s guess who ends up in the opposition’s big chair, let alone where they end up on a troubling degradation of one of the few systems journalists can use to learn about government decision-making.

    Politicians can also make FoI requests of their own, in a bid for political accountability. Maybe at some stage after this fortnight, the Liberal and National parties can get back to that brand of opposition politics, rather than writing new episodes in their never-ending soap opera.

    (Original content – AI unavailable)

    Source: Guardian

  • 15h ago 04…

    15h ago 04…

    15h ago 04.20 GMT Auction activity roars back after long weekend Auction activity has bounced back sharply this weekend, with 1,629 auctions scheduled. This is almost four times the 305 auctions held at the long weekend last week, and a jump on the 1,390 auctions that occurred at the same time last year. Based on results collected so far, CoreLogic’s summary found that the preliminary clearance rate was 69.7% across the country, but above the 59.4% actual rate in the final numbers. Across the capital cities: Sydney : 314 of 468 auctions with a preliminary clearance rate of 71.3%

    Melbourne : 489 of 643 auctions with a preliminary clearance rate of 69.3%

    Brisbane : 164 of 221 auctions with a preliminary clearance rate of 75%

    Adelaide : 101 of 153 auctions with a preliminary clearance rate of 86.1%

    Canberra : 123 of 135 auctions with a preliminary clearance rate of 39.8%

    Tasmania : One auction to be held.

    Perth: Eight auctions held. Share Updated at 04.37 GMT

    15h ago 04.11 GMT Why some economists go against the flow on RBA rate bet The Reserve Bank is widely tipped to become the first major central bank on Tuesday to U-turn from rate cuts to rate hikes in the post-Covid inflation era. A handful of economists are expecting the Reserve Bank of Australia to hold the cash rate steady at 3.6% when its board wraps up its first meeting of 2026 on Tuesday. The crux of his heterodox argument is that most analysts have focused on a rise in core inflation in the Australian Bureau of Statistics’ (ABS) long-running quarterly consumer price index series, the RBA’s preferred measure. But doing this ignores a downward trend in the ABS’s newly minted monthly data series, which shows inflationary pressures are more temporary than permanent, although the RBA has said it would pay less heed to the monthly measure while kinks were ironed out in the data. Money markets believe there is a high probability of a hike, implying a 70% chance of a 25-basis-point increase. While the decision dominates the week’s agenda, economists will also scrutinise building approvals data on Tuesday and Australia’s balance of trade, due Thursday. Federal politicians will grill RBA officials on their rate decisions on Friday, when its governor, Michele Bullock, deputy, Andrew Hauser, and three assistant governors front a committee hearing in Canberra. Wall Street investors are meanwhile trying to figure out what Donald Trump’s nomination to succeed the US Federal Reserve chair, Jerome Powell, will mean for interest rates. Its former governor Kevin Warsh should favour lower rates but stop short of more aggressive monetary easing linked to other potential nominees. – AAP Share Updated at 04.35 GMT

    15h ago 03.59 GMT Australia swelters through fourth hottest January on record Graham Readfearn Australians endured the country’s fourth-hottest January on record, with nationwide temperatures 1.9C above average, according to Bureau of Meteorology data. Last month marked the 24th consecutive January in which Australia’s mean temperature exceeded the long-term average from 1961 to 1990. View image in fullscreen Chart showing mean January temperatures in Australia from 1910 to 2026 Illustration: Bureau of Meteorology New South Wales had a standout month, with the data showing maximum temperatures were the second highest on the bureau’s record, which goes back to 1910. Maximums in South Australia were the third highest on record. Global heating caused mostly by burning fossil fuels has seen Australia warm by 1.5C since 1910. Australia experienced two heatwaves in January. Last week’s extreme heat set records tumbling in South Australia and Victoria, with multiple locations recording their highest-ever temperatures. Day and night, there’s no relief: five ways this heatwave is one of Australia’s worst on record Read more Share Updated at 04.20 GMT

    15h ago 03.43 GMT Laneway festival to host drug checking service as part of NSW trial Laneway festival will host an onsite drug checking service as part of an ongoing trial, it was confirmed on Sunday. Laneway will be the 11th festival to participate in the year-long trial when it begins next Sunday at Centennial Park. The service will be free and anonymous for festival patrons, allowing them to bring a small sample to be checked on-site by qualified health staff. Participants will be informed of the substance and its potency, along with guidance on how to reduce risks if they choose to use it. Trained peer workers are available on site to provide tailored guidance on risks, confidential support and information about additional support services. The NSW chief health officer, Dr Kerry Chant, said the service was intended to help people make informed decisions to reduce drug-related harm, but is not a guarantee of safety. This trial aims to inform individuals about substances, allowing them to avoid dangerous substances, discard high-risk drugs, make safer and more informed choices and potentially avoid serious health risks. Our priority is to reduce harm and keep people safe. The trial comes after the NSW Government’s Drug Summit concluded in December 2024. The summit’s report recommended a trial of music festival-based drug testing as a priority. Share Updated at 04.08 GMT

    16h ago 03.28 GMT ‘It’s not about democracy’: NSW attorney general doubles down on phrase ban The New South Wales state government remains determined to ban use of the phrase “globalise the intifada” despite most submissions to an inquiry about the move opposing the ban. When asked about the apparent opposition to the ban during a press conference on Sunday, the NSW attorney general, Michael Daley, contradicted a report that noted community opposition to the ban, saying, “I’m not sure that’s the case.” Daley noted that the inquiry received 700 submissions, of which 155 are public. It’s not about democracy. Just because a lot of people want to keep doing something that’s unacceptable doesn’t mean it’s the right thing for a government to do it. For more on this story, read the past report by Guardian Australia’s Penry Buckley: Inquiry calls for ban on ‘globalise the intifada’ in NSW – but only when used to incite hatred and violence Read more Share Updated at 03.40 GMT

    16h ago 03.07 GMT Josh Butler Greens blame government inaction on housing and price gouging for looming rate rise The Greens claim that Australians are facing an interest rate hike this week, in part, because the government hasn’t done enough to deal with rising housing prices and corporate price gouging. Greens leader Larissa Waters claims the Labor government should be doing more to manage those issues, in a bid to keep inflation down. If you’re a mortgage holder or a renter, you face being hit by the RBA to ‘fix’ the government’s ‘inflation problem’. Anyone with a mortgage will be giving more per month to the big banks. Renters are going to cop it as it will trickle down into unfair rent rises. It’s hard enough right now to get ahead, you shouldn’t be doing it harder. It shouldn’t be on you. This is about choices. The government’s priorities mean that you are copping the pain while banks, energy companies and property investors keep winning.” She added: If they’d taken them on, you wouldn’t be getting a rate rise. Greens’ economic spokesperson Nick McKim went on to say: This is about political choices, and Labor has chosen to protect corporate profits while ordinary people wear the pain. If the Reserve Bank increases interest rates the treasurer will wring his hands and pretend he shares people’s pain when in reality he is responsible for increasing pressure on the RBA to raise. Share Updated at 03.22 GMT

    16h ago 02.46 GMT NSW to remove ‘good character’ from being considered at sentencing hearings in nationwide first Offenders convicted of any crime will no longer be able to rely on glowing character references during sentencing under changes being introduced in New South Wales, in a move supported by survivors of sexual abuse but which others say could limit defendants’ rights. On Wednesday, the state government will become the first nationwide to introduce legislation to remove “good character” from being considered at sentencing hearings, when judges hear about someone’s prior record, general reputation and any positive contributions to society as mitigating factors. It follows a recommendation from a NSW sentencing council review released on Sunday, which was commissioned in April 2024 after a campaign by Your Reference Ain’t Relevant to remove good character references during sentencing for child sex offenders. For more on this story, read the full report by Guardian Australia’s Penry Buckley: NSW to remove ‘good character’ from being considered at sentencing hearings in nationwide first Read more Share Updated at 03.22 GMT

    17h ago 02.29 GMT Victoria flips Metro Tunnel’s ‘big switch’ as new services begin Sunday marks the day Melbourne’s $15bn Metro Tunnel will begin service in what the Victorian state government is calling “the big switch”. New timetables with extra services that use the Metro Tunnel – first announced in 2015 and opened in November – will begin from Sunday. The state government says the services will reduce congestion on the network and will also involve changes to bus routes in regional Victoria and inner-city Melbourne. View image in fullscreen State Library station is one of five new Metro Tunnel stations. Photograph: Erik Anderson/AAP Share Updated at 02.42 GMT

    17h ago 02.13 GMT ‘Changed me’: deputy leader back after cancer fight The NSW deputy premier is returning to work for the new school year after her second cancer battle in three years. Prue Car, who is also the minister for education and early learning, went on leave in June after revealing she had been diagnosed with breast cancer. The 43-year-old mother said it had been a difficult seven months, but she would be back at work on Monday to kick off the new school year. View image in fullscreen Prue Car. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP In a video message on Sunday, she said the experience had “certainly changed me in so many ways”. What hasn’t changed is my unwavering commitment to deliver for the people of NSW, for this beautiful community I represent here in western Sydney, as well as continuing our program in education. I can’t wait to get back to work. Car entered state parliament in 2015 for the western Sydney seat of Londonderry and has been deputy premier since Labor won government in March 2023. The NSW MP remained deputy premier during her treatment but stepped back from her ministerial duties in education and early learning and western Sydney, handing the reins to fellow minister Courtney Houssos. It was Car’s second major health battle, having taken leave in 2022 after an unrelated kidney cancer diagnosis. – AAP Share Updated at 04.00 GMT

    (Original content – AI unavailable)

    Source: Guardian

  • Veterans of Israel’s Elite Forces Join Protests to Save Democracy

    Veterans of Israel’s Elite Forces Join Protests to Save Democracy

    Israel’s Veterans Unite Against Judicial Overhaul Plan

    In a sea of Israeli flags, Yiftach Golov holds one that looks a little different. Among the hundreds of thousands of protesters who took to the streets for the 13th week in a row on Saturday, Golov hoists a brown flag that represents a group called “Brother and Sisters in Arms.”

    They are veterans – many, like Golov, from elite forces – who now feel they are fighting on a new battlefield: To save Israeli democracy.

    “We believe this is our responsibility to go once again called to the flag of the nation to stop this madness to defend Israel,” Golov said, as he weaved his way through the protesters on Tel Aviv’s Kaplan street, between the high-rises that house many of Israel’s high tech companies.

    During the second intifada, in the early 2000s, Golov served in a special forces reconnaissance unit. He was never before particularly political, focusing more on getting his PhD in biophysics from Tel Aviv University.

    But when the protest movement against the Israeli government’s judicial overhaul plan began in January, Golov attended one a demonstration and soon became one of thousands of veterans, and now military reservists, who have taken up the cause as their new mission.

    Some, including elite Air Force reservists, have taken it a step further, threatening not to heed the call to train or even serve in protest of the government’s plans planned judicial changes, which would give the governing parties more control over Israel’s judiciary.

    A group from Brothers and Sisters in Arms protests by carrying a figure wrapped in the Israeli flag on a stretcher, the way they would carry a wounded comrade off the field.

    Others have taken to becoming some of the most active organizers and demonstrators. Last week, a group from Brothers and Sisters in Arms protested by carrying a figure wrapped in the Israeli flag on a stretcher, the way they would carry a wounded comrade off the field.

    While Golov says he has not taken the drastic step to refuse service, he understands the motivation.

    “We’re fighting for justice and liberty, just like the American story, that’s the values that that are being represented symbolized back when we look at our flag, that’s something that was lacking lacking for the last few decades. So basically, we reclaim the flag,” he said.

    Fellow members of the group, all wearing brown shirts with the organization’s logo, come up and say hello. They’re sprinkled all throughout the protests. One is even leading the “Pink Front,” a group of coordinated drummers who look like they are dressed for a rave, and often lead the chants at the protests.

    They’re using skills they learned in the military – how to organize, how to mobilize – now for the protests. But more importantly, they say they have the same type of motivation.

    “The very deep feeling that you are part of something bigger than yourself, that (you’re) allowed to sacrifice anything that is needed, whether it’s your career, health, seriously mental health,” Golov said. “We all have a mission, you’re willing to do it at any cost. You’re very determined, you know that you are on the right side, you’re carrying the torch of light. That keeps us being highly motivated despite the fact that we’re not sleeping for days.”

    Israel’s protest movement is made up of many disparate groups, but the pressure from Israel’s much vaunted veterans has been seen as a key to moving the needle.

    Last Monday, after weeks of sustained protests and the largest general strike in Israeli history, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced a pause to the legislation, to allow time for negotiations with the opposition.

    But despite the announcements, protesters are still out in the streets in large numbers. CNN affiliate Channel 12 in Israel estimated the size of Saturday’s demonstration in Tel Aviv at about 150,000 people. Organizers claimed it was 230,000.

    Last week’s mass protests and widespread strike action came after Netanyahu said he had decided to fire Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for advocating a delay in passing the legislation – a move that Netanyahu has since delayed, sources told CNN, due to “the present security situation.”

    In his televised speech calling for a delay, Gallant had said the pause in the legislation was needed “for the security of Israel,” citing the refusal of some Israel Defense Forces reservists to train in protest of the government plans. He said pressing ahead with the proposals could threaten Israel’s security.

    Under pressure at home and from allies abroad, Netanyahu said he would delay votes on the remaining legislation until after the Knesset’s Passover recess in April “to give time for a real chance for a real debate.”

    Source: CNN

  • NASA’s Perseverance Rover Discovers Evidence of Ancient Lake on Mars

    NASA’s Perseverance Rover Discovers Evidence of Ancient Lake on Mars

    A team of scientists working with NASA’s Perseverance rover has discovered evidence of an ancient lake on Mars, a finding that could help explain the Red Planet’s past habitability. The discovery was made using data from the rover’s SuperCam instrument, which is equipped with a laser that can vaporize rock samples and analyze their chemical composition.

    The team’s findings, published in the journal Science, suggest that the lake was once a massive body of water that filled a 45-kilometer-wide impact crater on Mars. The lake is believed to have existed around 3.5 billion years ago, during a time when Mars was still warm and wet.

    The discovery was made possible by the Perseverance rover’s ability to collect and analyze rock samples from the Martian surface. The rover’s SuperCam instrument uses a laser to vaporize the rock samples, creating a plasma that can be analyzed to determine the sample’s chemical composition.

    The team’s findings suggest that the lake was once a complex system of rivers, lakes, and wetlands that covered much of Mars’ surface. The lake was likely formed by the impact of a massive asteroid that created the impact crater, which was then filled with water that flowed in from the surrounding terrain.

    The discovery has significant implications for our understanding of Mars’ past habitability. The presence of water on Mars in the past suggests that the planet may have had conditions suitable for life, which could have implications for the search for life on the Red Planet.

    The Perseverance rover has been exploring Mars since February 2021 and has already made several significant discoveries, including the detection of methane in the Martian atmosphere. The rover’s findings have helped scientists to better understand the geology and climate of Mars, and have provided valuable insights into the planet’s past habitability.

    The discovery of the ancient lake on Mars is a major breakthrough in the search for life on the Red Planet. The finding suggests that Mars may have had conditions suitable for life in the past, which could have implications for the search for life on the planet in the future.

    The team’s findings are published in the journal Science and are available online. The full paper can be accessed by subscribers to the journal. The research was funded by NASA and was conducted in collaboration with the European Space Agency and other international partners.

    The discovery of the ancient lake on Mars is a significant milestone in the search for life on the Red Planet. The finding has significant implications for our understanding of Mars’ past habitability and could have implications for the search for life on the planet in the future.

  • “If it’s through attack or through other means, I don’t know…

    “If it’s through attack or through other means, I don’t know…

    “If it’s through attack or through other means, I don’t know, but certainly we should leverage the situation to switch regimes. It won’t be the first time we’ll deal with the bombs – it’s not nice, but if it’s going to help us in the longer term to feel safer here then we will have to go through it”.

    (Original content – AI unavailable)

  • Visa Rejections Hit UAE Workers Amid Gulf Tensions

    Visa Rejections Hit UAE Workers Amid Gulf Tensions

    Emirates workers have had visas to the kingdom rejected since tensions erupted between the Gulf powerhouses. The move is seen as a retaliatory measure by Saudi Arabia in response to the UAE’s involvement in the Yemen conflict. The UAE has been providing military support to Yemen’s government, a move that has been strongly criticized by Saudi Arabia and its allies. The visa rejections have caused significant disruption to the lives of thousands of workers, many of whom have been stranded in the UAE. Some have been unable to return to their families for months, while others have seen their livelihoods affected due to the inability to travel. The UAE has denied any wrongdoing, stating that the visa rejections are a result of a technical glitch. However, many experts believe that the move is a deliberate attempt by Saudi Arabia to exert pressure on the UAE. The situation has highlighted the complex web of relationships between the Gulf states and the impact that regional conflicts can have on the lives of ordinary people. The UAE has been a key player in the region’s politics, and the visa rejections are seen as a sign of the kingdom’s growing assertiveness. The move has also raised concerns about the treatment of migrant workers, who are often vulnerable to exploitation and abuse. The UAE has a large population of migrant workers, many of whom come from countries such as India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. The visa rejections have sparked a debate about the rights of migrant workers and the need for greater protections. The UAE has promised to address the concerns of migrant workers, but many remain skeptical about the government’s intentions. The situation is likely to continue to unfold in the coming weeks and months, with many questions still unanswered about the motivations behind the visa rejections. The conflict between the UAE and Saudi Arabia is a complex one, with many factors at play. However, one thing is clear: the visa rejections have had a profound impact on the lives of thousands of workers, and it remains to be seen how the situation will ultimately be resolved.