As it happened: PM urges Australians in Lebanon to leave; Rex banks on government bailout

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As it happened: PM urges Australians in Lebanon to leave; Rex banks on government bailout

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What we covered today

By Lachlan Abbott

Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll end today’s coverage.

To conclude, here’s a look back at the day’s major stories:

  • The Albanese government has urged thousands of Australians in Lebanon to return home, warning the conflict in the Middle East is at risk of severe escalation after the deaths of key Hamas and Hezbollah leaders in Israeli airstrikes.

  • Tech behemoths could be slapped with big new taxes after publishers warned the federal government against pushing Facebook owner Meta into abandoning news content altogether, creating a news desert on local social media.

  • The Olympics in Paris will tonight feature both of Australia’s hockey teams, a men’s rowing crew with a chance of winning a gold medal, and the likes of Ariarne Titmus back in the pool as the country’s swimmers chase more glory. Follow all the action here.

  • In NSW, fresh court documents released today allege the former police officer accused of the shooting murder of Jesse Baird and his boyfriend Luke Davies was stalking Baird and broke into his share house six months before the killings.

  • In Victoria, a detective has told a Melbourne court that authorities fear a “mass casualty incident” as a notorious crime gang embroiled in an underworld war for control of the illicit tobacco trade remains a “live and active threat”.

  • In Queensland, a coroner investigating the shooting deaths of six people in the Wieambilla ambush has released helicopter footage of the suspects’ final hours alive as they fired at police attempting to raid their remote property.

  • In Western Australia, two people are dead after a large tree fell on their ute as wild weather lashed parts of the state.

  • In business news, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has blamed Regional Express’ (Rex) expansion into capital city services as the reason behind its recent collapse, as pressure on the government to help fund its regional services intensifies.

  • In sport news, the Matildas are on the hunt for a new coach after Football Australia confirmed Tony Gustavsson’s contract would not be extended beyond their disappointing campaign at Paris 2024 – their worst Olympic result in two decades.

Thanks again for your company. Have a lovely night.

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Australia’s Antarctic research needs ’100-year plan’

By Ethan James

Australia needs a 100-year plan for critical Antarctic scientific research so it can safeguard against potential future sovereign threats, an inquiry has been told.

A federal parliamentary inquiry examining the importance of the frozen continent to the nation’s interests held a hearing in Hobart today.

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Vice-chancellor of the University of Tasmania Rufus Black said scientific work in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean had never been more crucial given climate challenges.

But he said Australia’s capacity to deliver research was at risk due to disjointed funding and competing science and logistic interests.

“Ensuring appropriate resources ... is critical to Australia’s stated national interests,” Professor Black said.

“The way Antarctica might change as climate changes it, that really will fundamentally change the geopolitical significance of it ... Australia should be playing the 100-year game, not the short-term five to 10-year game.”

AAP

Bob Brown sends SOS to Queen Mary after whaling activist detained

By Abe Maddison

Former senator Bob Brown has urged Tasmanian-born Queen Mary of Denmark to intervene on behalf of high-profile anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson after his arrest in Greenland.

The Sea Shepherd founder, who had previously been based in Hobart, was taken into custody by police when his ship, the John Paul DeJoria, docked in Danish-controlled Greenland’s Nuuk harbour on July 21.

Bob Brown photographed in Hobart,
Tasmania in 2021.

Bob Brown photographed in Hobart, Tasmania in 2021.Credit: Peter Mathew

A local court ordered his detention and he will reappear on August 15 after a Japanese notice for his arrest was issued through Interpol.

The Paris-based activist could face up to 15 years in prison in Japan on charges related to his anti-whaling interventions in the Antarctic region.

On Thursday, Brown said the case would shame Copenhagen in the eyes of the world “if it acts as the lickspittle of Tokyo, whose cruel and bloody whaling in Antarctic waters ended in 2014 because it was found to be illegal by the International Court of Justice”.

Captain Watson had upheld global law “but he is now the one headed to prison while in the custody of the Japanese government, at the behest of their whalers”, Brown said.

Paul Watson, founder and president of the animal rights and environmental group Sea Shepherd.

Paul Watson, founder and president of the animal rights and environmental group Sea Shepherd.Credit: AP

“So we’ve got a perverse and totally wrong process here of the criminals jailing the person upholding the law,” he said. “Under international law, the Japanese whalers are the criminals; if the Danish government wants to lock somebody up, go for them.”

Brown conceded Queen Mary would not want to be involved in the direct legal activities of the Danish government “but they need to know that their queen knows that in Tasmania, this is a furore”.

“Australians will not want Paul Watson sent to Japan to a death penalty, effectively, in a Japanese jail,” he said.

In his letter to the Queen, the former Greens leader writes that most Australians supported Capt Watson’s efforts to end the cruel and illegal whale slaughter.

“We owe him a great debt,” he wrote.

AAP

Activist group ramps up pressure on Woodside’s fossil fuel investment

By Marion Rae

A shareholder activist group is demanding that Woodside Energy extracts more value for investors from its capital, not more oil and gas.

The Australian Centre for Corporate Responsibility (ACCR) on Thursday said Woodside was under pressure to improve, following a majority (58 per cent) vote against its climate plan at the last annual general meeting.

Releasing a report, What’s Next For Woodside?, the centre said share buybacks would deliver 140 per cent more value for shareholders than proceeding with the Browse project off the coast of Western Australia and Sunrise in the Timor Sea.

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Developing Browse was more expensive than 70 per cent of the world’s unapproved gas projects, and the recently acquired Driftwood project was more expensive than three quarters (76 per cent) of those in the US, the report found.

The shareholder activist organisation holds a mere 322 Woodside shares, of a total 1,898,749,771 on issue, which means it has 0.00000017 per cent of issued shares, Woodside told AAP.

But the group also enlists the support of other shareholders in its campaign to release free cash flow to investors that would otherwise bankroll fossil fuel production growth.

Woodside chief executive Meg O’Neill says the company has listened carefully to investors and is providing information about market demand and important updates to emissions reduction plan.

AAP

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Tens of thousands of Australians told to flee Lebanon

By Lachlan Abbott

Up to 20,000 Australians in Lebanon have been told to leave immediately as fears rise that conflict in the Middle East will escalate into a major region-wide war.

Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs Tim Watts revealed the government’s estimation of Australians that could be in the Middle Eastern country on the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing program moments ago.

Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs Tim Watts.

Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs Tim Watts.Credit: Dominic Lorrimer

Earlier today, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong led the government’s calls for Australians to urgently return home after the deaths of key Hamas and Hezbollah leaders in Israeli airstrikes recently.

Politicians and diplomats fear that retaliatory strikes from Hezbollah and Iran could spark an all-out regional war as the conflict in Gaza continues. So far, Hezbollah, a Lebanese proxy of Iran, and Israel have limited their strikes to the Israel-Lebanon border. In April, Iran launched a drone strike on Israel, marking their first direct attack the country since their decades-long proxy conflict began. Iran said that strike was in retaliation for Israel bombing an Iranian embassy in Damascus, Syria.

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Speaking shortly after 4pm, Watt acknowledged many Lebanese-Australians may have heard similar warnings before.

“Can I just say to them: don’t push your luck. Don’t wait and see how this turns out,” Watt said.

“If Beirut airport closes, we are saying to Australians that we cannot guarantee our ability to evacuate you. You may need to remain in Beirut for an extended period of time … and that is why we are giving very strong advice.

“Take the options available to you now to leave via commercial flights that are still operating from Beirut airport.”

PM appoints new Australian auditor-general

By Lachlan Abbott

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has revealed Australia’s next auditor-general, who will scrutinise government spending for the next decade.

Dr Caralee McLiesh will begin a 10-year term on November 4, the prime minister said in a statement released shortly after 3pm today.

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McLiesh will take over the leadership of the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) from Rona Mellor, who was acting auditor-general since February this year after Grant Hehir left the position.

The prime minister said McLiesh had more than 25 years’ experience across government, international, not-for-profit and commercial sectors.

She served as the secretary and chief executive of the New Zealand Treasury since 2019. Before then, she was managing director of TAFE NSW and deputy secretary of the NSW Treasury.

This year, the nation’s audit office has released several reports that revealed Commonwealth mismanagement of taxpayer funds.

Vic opposition walk from parliament over CFMEU answers

By Broede Carmody and Rachel Eddie

The Victorian opposition has marched out of question time in state parliament after expressing outrage at the way Premier Jacinta Allan responded to a grilling about the CFMEU saga.

The walkout occurred more than halfway through Victorian question time on Thursday.

Victorian Liberal leader John Pesutto speaks to reporters on the steps of parliament after leading an opposition walkout.

Victorian Liberal leader John Pesutto speaks to reporters on the steps of parliament after leading an opposition walkout.Credit: Broede Carmody

Leader of opposition business James Newbury, in at times testy exchanges, said on the floor that “question time is a joke, question time has become a joke”.

The opposition then walked out after their sixth question about the CFMEU. The government broke out into laughter as the opposition left.

Shortly after, Greens leader Ellen Sandell opened a question by joking: “We always knew the Greens were the real opposition.”

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Last month, this masthead, The Australian Financial Review and 60 Minutes published a special investigation into the construction union that revealed infiltration by bikies and organised criminals, intimidation and allegations of corruption. In one story, this masthead revealed that Allan, as deputy premier and minister for transport infrastructure, was sent detailed evidence in 2022 of CFMEU officials threatening violence on Victorian government sites part of its Big Build infrastructure program.

Speaking to reporters on the steps of parliament after today’s walkout, Opposition Leader John Pesutto said his team had asked 24 questions related to the CFMEU this sitting week and had received an unsatisfactory response each time.

“Under Jacinta Allan, question time has become a joke,” Pesutto said. “We’re not going to accept it.”

Nationals leader Peter Walsh accused the premier of running a CFMEU “protection racket”.

“She just won’t answer questions that are relevant to Victoria.”

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NGA acquires $9.8m painting by violent paedophile Gauguin

By Liz Hobday

The National Gallery of Australia has paid $9.8 million for an important painting by controversial French artist Paul Gauguin.

The blue roof or Farm at Le Pouldu (1890) is the first painting by Gauguin to become part of an Australian public collection.

Paul Gauguin’s The Blue Roof or Farm at Le Pouldu (Le toit blue or Ferme au Pouldu), 1890.

Paul Gauguin’s The Blue Roof or Farm at Le Pouldu (Le toit blue or Ferme au Pouldu), 1890.

The purchase was announced during the gallery’s major exhibition on the influential artist, titled Gauguin’s World: Tōna Iho, Tōna Ao.

Gauguin was a violent paedophile who abandoned his wife and five children in Europe, moving to French Polynesia and marrying three native teenage girls, the youngest 13 years old.

“In today’s context, Gauguin’s interactions in Polynesia in the later part of the 19th century would not be accepted and are recognised as such,” the NGA said in a statement.

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The acquisition is a coup for the gallery, according to art historian Emeritus Professor Sasha Grishin from the Australian National University.

“It’s a good thing to have – whether something else could have been acquired, well, that’s always the question,” he told AAP.

Whether the gallery should have held the Gauguin exhibition, or has acknowledged Gauguin’s past sufficiently in the show, are separate questions to its decision to buy the painting, Grishin said.

“Whether when you enter the exhibition, you should have a little plaque up saying this person is a really, really nasty piece of work – perhaps that should be brought to the forefront,” he said.

The artwork is certainly an important acquisition, agreed National Gallery Director Dr Nick Mitzevich.

“It captures a key point in art history – the moment when the artist emerged as an intensely original master, taking Impressionist colour schemes and transcending them to be bolder and more daring,” he said.

AAP

Market update: ASX reaches another milestone on dovish Fed

By Stan Choe and Penry Buckley

The Australian sharemarket has traded higher today after technology stocks drove a rally on Wall Street, where Fed comments fuelled expectations that long-sought cuts to interest rates will be arriving soon.

The S&P/ASX 200 index was up 39.10 points, or 0.5 per cent, to 8131.40 points as of 2.21pm AEST. Thursday marked the first time the index had risen above 8100 points.

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Mining stocks, energy and information technology companies led the gains, with industrials and financials tracking lower.

The gains came after the local market surged 1.8 per cent surge in the previous session following key inflation data, which showed signs of disinflation in Australia’s economy.

The better-than-expected data has raised hopes the Reserve Bank could start cutting rates in November, having lifted the cash rate 13 times since March 2022.

With AAP

Keep updated with the market wrap here.

Forrest appoints Noel Pearson to Fortescue board

By Peter Milne

Andrew Forrest has appointed high-profile Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson to the board of $58-billion iron-ore miner Fortescue.

Noel Pearson at the National Press Club last year.

Noel Pearson at the National Press Club last year.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

Forrest said he admired and respected Pearson, who he had known for more than 20 years.

“Noel is an innovative thinker and passionate and formidable Australian who will bring enormous benefit and insight to our board,” Forrest said.

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Pearson joins eight other directors under board chair Forrest, including UK Olympic runner Sebastian Coe and former CSIRO chief executive Larry Marshall.

The appointment comes two weeks after Fortescue announced 700 job losses, mainly from its energy division, and a dramatic scaling back of its plans to produce green hydrogen, a nascent clean fuel Forrest had aggressively promoted.

Shares in Fortescue fell 14 per cent on Tuesday after reports that a major investor was looking to dispose of about $2 billion of stock at a discount.

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