Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (2024)

Key events

  • 2d agoWhat we learned: Wednesday 17 April
  • 2d agoNew Zealand has ‘been less gullible’ than Australia over US alliance: Bob Carr
  • 2d agoMore than 500 horses found slaughtered on property in Wagga Wagga
  • 2d ago‘Weakness is provocative’: Hastie says Labor’s $50bn ADF plan amounts to spending cut
  • 2d agoDeportation bill breaches rights and requires extensive amendment: committee
  • 2d ago‘My job is to bring the nation together,’ PM says
  • 2d agoEnvironment groups respond to argument they should ‘take a chill pill’
  • 2d agoCandlelit vigil for Bondi Junction victims to be held on Sunday
  • 2d agoGroups want environmental law overhaul delivered in this term of government
  • 2d agoFrench ambassador praises citizens who assisted during Bondi Junction attack
  • 2d agoRace discrimination commissioner urges unity in wake of Sydney attacks
  • 2d agoMarles: government 'utterly committed' to following through on Brereton recommendations
  • 2d agoQueensland LNP will support state government's clean energy bill
  • 2d agoRichard Marles unveils national defence strategy, including extra $50bn spending over 10 years
  • 2d agoEx ACCC chief Graeme Samuel to conservation groups: ‘Take a chill pill’
  • 2d agoVictorian First Peoples’ Assembly says treaty negotiations to discuss financial redress
  • 2d agoBondi Junction Westfield to reopen tomorrow for community reflection day
  • 3d agoThree teenagers to face court after fatal stabbing in western Sydney
  • 3d agoAnglican priest details what ten years of detention has done to high court litigant AZC20
  • 3d agoCondition update on Bondi Junction stabbing victims
  • 3d agoTanya Plibersek encourages people to switch off social media during this time
  • 3d ago‘No point pretending everything is as normal’, says NSW premier
  • 3d ago‘Most severe test for social cohesion’ since federation, shadow defence minister says
  • 3d agoChalmers accuses Greens of ‘confected outrage’ during supermarkets inquiry
  • 3d agoTreasurer flags ‘real premium on responsibility’ in upcoming budget
  • 3d agoMarles to address National Press Club and unveil national defence strategy
  • 3d agoHigh court to hear appeal on uncooperative immigration detainees
  • 3d agoAlbanese to announce $400m loans for industry projects
  • 3d agoAssange 'would not face death penalty' in US
  • 3d agoWelcome

Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature

3d ago22.48BST

Unemployment ‘might take up a little bit’ when new numbers released later this week

Q: Given the economic conditions we’re seeing, what should households with mortgages expect?

Treasurer Jim Chalmers did not answer directly regarding any potential rate rises, but said inflation has “come off pretty substantially”, unemployment was down in the most recent data, and real wages are growing.

[Inflation] won’t necessarily continue to come off in a perfectly straight line, but [it] is a fraction of what it was a couple of years ago when we came to office. That’s a good thing.

He flagged unemployment “might take up a little bit on Thursday when we get new numbers on the jobs market”.

So we’ve got a whole bunch of things going for us in Australia, but enough to concern us as well about the global conditions about the way that people are still under considerable cost of living pressure.

3d ago22.42BST

Treasurer flags ‘real premium on responsibility’ in upcoming budget

The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, is on his way to the United States for G20 talks, and has been speaking with ABC RN about the state of the global economy – and what this means for the government’s third budget.

He said there was a “tricky balance of risks” in the global economy currently, and in Australia’s, with inflation still causing impacts and growth slowing.

The way that I would describe it to your listeners is we’ve got inflation lingering in parts of the world, we’ve got growth slowing in China and elsewhere, we’ve got tensions rising in the Middle East and the war in Europe. We’ve got supply chains which are straining and we’ve got a global economy which is fragmenting and transforming and so all of these factors are really important to us as we finalise the government’s third budget.

These are going to be these global conditions are going to be a really big influence on our budget, so the trip to DC which will be a pretty quick and make the most of it but it’s a good opportunity to take the temperature of the global economy.

Because in the budget, what you’ll see is a real premium on responsibility and these conditions, but also a real emphasis on economic security.

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (1)

3d ago22.30BST

Motorcyclist seriously injured in crash in Sydney CBD

An intersection in Sydney’s CBD is expected to remain a crime scene for some time today after a serious crash took place early this morning.

Around 4am, emergency services responded to reports of a crash between a utility and a motorcycle at the intersection of King Street and York Street.

Paramedics treated the motorcycle rider at the scene who was taken to St Vincent’s hospital in a critical condition. The driver of the utility, a 36-year-old man, was uninjured and taken to the same hospital for mandatory testing.

Officers have established a crime scene and the intersection is expected to remain a crime scene for a “considerable amount of time”. Motorists are urged to avoid the area.

According to Live Traffic the road was closed in an eastbound direction, however it seems to have returned to normal just after 7am.

3d ago22.22BST

Marles to address National Press Club and unveil national defence strategy

Defence minister Richard Marles is expected today to unveil cuts to programs in a bid to fund crucial areas under a shake-up of the Australian military, AAP reports.

In an address to the National Press Club in Canberra today, Marles will release a new national defence strategy.

The government released the defence strategic review in April last year, which found the Australian Defence Force was no longer fit for purpose.

It’s expected new missiles and drones will be prioritised under the recalibration.

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (2)

Opposition defence spokesman Andrew Hastie said for the defence minister to pass the test of leadership, the new plans “must be more than just vague language, vague promises and vague time frames”.

Writing ahead of the announcement, Malcolm Davis, a senior analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said the government should prioritise the “rapid deployment” of an integrated air and missile defence system for the ADF to protect critical northern base infrastructure.

3d ago22.16BST

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (3)

Paul Karp

Human Rights Law Centre to argue a person’s reason for refusing to consent to removal must be considered in whether detention is lawful

Continued from last post:

ASF17’s case before the high court is that there is no “general exception” to the rule that where deportation is not possible immigration detention is unlawful simply because of the “noncooperation” by an alien.

ASF17’s lawyers submitted:

It would only emphasise the punitive—and thus constitutionally invalid—nature of the executive detention if parliament were to purport to extend it in respect of a ‘non-cooperative’ person for the purpose of detaining them until and unless they cooperated with their removal, in circ*mstances where the constitutional limitation would otherwise be reached (with the result that cooperation may be forthcoming only under the threat of further, and possibly indefinite, deprivation of liberty).

ASF17’s case is supported by an intervention from AZC20, another Iranian asylum seeker, who is represented by the Human Rights Law Centre (HRLC) and barrister Craig Lenehan SC, who won the original NZYQ case in November.

The HRLC will argue:

  • Indefinite detention is unlawful under any circ*mstances

  • A person’s reasons for refusing to consent to their removal must be considered in determining whether their detention is lawful

  • Detention is not lawful when the primary barrier to the removal of people is another country’s refusal to accept the forced return of its citizens.

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (4)

Sanmati Verma, legal director at HRLC, said:

Other countries around the world have recognised there must be limits on detention in all circ*mstances. Yet our government is still trying to use indefinite detention to coerce people into returning to danger. Instead of trying to find legal workarounds to keep people locked up, the Australian government should support people to rebuild their lives in freedom and safety.

3d ago22.11BST

High court to hear appeal on uncooperative immigration detainees

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (5)

Paul Karp

The high court is today hearing the case of ASF17, an appeal that could extend the NZYQ ruling that indefinite detention is unlawful. At stake is whether people in immigration detention must be released if their refusal to cooperate has prevented them being deported.

ASF17 is an Iranian man who has said he “fears for his life if he is removed to Iran” because he is bisexual, Christian, a Faili Kurd and because he had opposed “the mistreatment of women by the government in Iran”.

In January Justice Craig Colvin ruled ASF17’s detention was lawful. He said:

Where ongoing detention is to arrange removal from Australia as soon as practicable, that lawful purpose is served for so long as there is a practicable way that the person may be removed, even if it requires cooperation from the detainee for it to be achieved.

When ASF17 appealed, the Albanese government applied to send the case to the high court to settle the legal uncertainty. It will argue for the right to continue detaining those who refuse to cooperate.

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (6)

In March Guardian Australia revealed a leaked internal estimate that more than 170 could be freed if the commonwealth loses the case, although the government is confident it will win the case.

In its submissions the commonwealth highlighted the primary judge’s findings that “the appellant’s refusal to undertake voluntary actions to assist in his return to Iran was not because of a genuine subjective fear of harm if returned there”.

It said:

The primary judge was correct to conclude that it is necessary to take into account the ability or capacity of a non-citizen to cooperate in achieving their removal, irrespective of any demonstrated unwillingness to cooperate, and irrespective of any subjective reasons for refusing to cooperate ...

The fact that it is within the power of such a non-citizen actually to bring their detention to an end by cooperating with their removal answers the [question] ... A non-citizen in that position is in ‘three-walled detention’ only.

3d ago22.00BST

Albanese to announce $400m loans for industry projects

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (7)

Josh Butler

The federal government will offer $400m in loans to an alumina facility in Queensland and fast-track support to a graphite project in South Australia, as part of its Future Made In Australia industry program.

Prime minister Anthony Albanese will make the announcement in Gladstone in Queensland today. Alpha HPA will deliver “Australia’s first high-purity alumina processing facility”, the PM’s office said, a mineral which is needed for LED lighting, batteries and semiconductors.

The Gladstone project will support around 200 jobs on an ongoing basis, and nearly 500 in construction.

The money will go out under the government’s $4 billion Critical Minerals Facility, one of the programs which will be rolled under the Future Made In Australia push.

The government is also announcing plans to help “fast track” a graphite project from Renascour Resources on the Eyre Peninsula. A $185 million loan for stage one of that development has been “conditionally approved” by the Labor government - it follows a restructuring of the company’s plans to develop that site, which were originally approved in February 2022 under the former Coalition government.

That project will support 150 construction jobs and 125 positions ongoing. Albanese said:

The global race for new jobs and new opportunities is on. Our Government wants Australia to be in it to win it.

These two critical minerals projects will help secure good and secure jobs in manufacturing, and clean, reliable energy.

3d ago21.57BST

However the assurances were immediately challenged by Assange’s team.

Assange’s wife Stella, whom he married while in prison in London, said the guarantees did not satisfy their concerns, describing them as “blatant weasel words”:

The United States has issued a non-assurance in relation to the First Amendment, and a standard assurance in relation to the death penalty. It makes no undertaking to withdraw the prosecution’s previous assertion that Julian has no First Amendment rights because he is not a U.S citizen. Instead, the US has limited itself to blatant weasel words claiming that Julian can “seek to raise” the First Amendment if extradited.

The diplomatic note does nothing to relieve our family’s extreme distress about his future - his grim expectation of spending the rest of his life in isolation in US prison for publishing award-winning journalism. The Biden Administration must drop this dangerous prosecution before it is too late.

- AAP

3d ago21.57BST

Assange 'would not face death penalty' in US

The United States government has provided assurances requested by the high court in London which could finally pave the way for WikiLeaks’ founder Julian Assange to be extradited from the United Kingdom, AAP reports.

Last month, the High Court ruled that, without certain US guarantees, Assange, 52, would be allowed to launch a new appeal against being extradited to face 18 charges, all bar one under the Espionage Act, over WikiLeaks’ release of confidential US military records and diplomatic cables.

Those assurances – that in a US trial he could rely on the first amendment right to free speech, that he is not “prejudiced at trial” due to his Australian citizenship and that there was no prospect of new charges which could result in the death penalty being imposed – have now been submitted by a deadline which fell overnight.

The document, seen by Reuters, stated that Assange would be able to rely on US first amendment protections and says “a sentence of death will neither be sought nor imposed”.

These assurances are binding on any and all present or subsequent individuals to whom authority has been delegated to decide the matters.

Judges in the UK are expected to consider the submission from the US authorities as well as any response from Assange’s lawyers.

3d ago21.37BST

Welcome

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (8)

Martin Farrer

Good morning. Thanks for joining us again for our rolling news coverage of the day. I’m Martin Farrer and I’ll be highlighting some of the main overnight news lines before my colleague Emily Wind picks up the news baton.

After five tumultuous days, NSW premier Chris Minns is considering tightening the laws surrounding the possession of knifes in the wake of the Bondi and Wakeley attacks, and also a fatal stabbing in Doonside on Friday. Minns and other political leaders, along with religious leaders, pleaded for calm amid what the premier called a “combustible situation” set off by the stabbing of Orthodox bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel on Monday night and subsequent street unrest. More coming up.

The nine-month-old baby who was seriously injured in the Bondi Junction knife rampage has been moved out of intensive care at Sydney Children’s hospital in Randwick, according to overnight reports citing an NSW health official. Harriet Good, whose mother Ashlee was killed in the attack by Joel Cauchi on Saturday, had surgery after suffering chest and arm injuries. Her condition had been critical but has now improved to serious but stable.

Anthony Albanese is to announce his government will loan $400m to an alumina facility in Queensland and fast-track support to a graphite project in South Australia, as part of its Future Made in Australia industry program.

Three of Sydney’s wealthiest private schools received double the federal funding they were entitled to last year under the official resource standard, new data shows, despite the introduction of reforms to tackle overfunding. Northern Beaches Christian school, St Augustine’s College and MLC school, all in Sydney, were funded at 171%, 160% and 158% of the SRS respectively, about double the 80% they should have received from the commonwealth.

And coming up: the US has continued its push to extradite Julian Assange from the UK, providing “assurances” requested by London’s high court about his legal rights – which Assange’s wife Stella Assange immediately criticised as “weasel words”. More on that too, soon.

Bob Carr urges New Zealand not to join Aukus – as it happened (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Carlyn Walter

Last Updated:

Views: 6093

Rating: 5 / 5 (50 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Carlyn Walter

Birthday: 1996-01-03

Address: Suite 452 40815 Denyse Extensions, Sengermouth, OR 42374

Phone: +8501809515404

Job: Manufacturing Technician

Hobby: Table tennis, Archery, Vacation, Metal detecting, Yo-yoing, Crocheting, Creative writing

Introduction: My name is Carlyn Walter, I am a lively, glamorous, healthy, clean, powerful, calm, combative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.