Tag: australia

  • Arsalan Khawaja: Australia cricket star’s brother ‘framed’ terror suspect

    Usman Khawaja (2nd R) poses with Rachel McLellan (C), brother Arsalan Khawaja (2nd L) and other family members at Crown Metropol after the Australian nets session on December 25, 2017 in Melbourne, Australia. Image copyright Michael Ward Off/Getty Pictures Symbol caption Usman Khawaja (right of centre) is pictured right here along with his brother Arsalan (left of centre) and different members of the family

    The brother of Australian cricket superstar Usman Khawaja has been arrested for allegedly framing every other guy over a faux terror plot.

    Police in Australia have charged Arsalan Khawaja, 39, with forgery and an try to pervert justice.

    In August, police charged a Sri Lankan scholar in Sydney over an alleged plan in a laptop about killing Australian politicians.

    Mohamed Kamer Nizamdeen used to be detained for a month earlier than being released.

    The 25-yr-antique PhD scholar had claimed that that he was once framed by way of a rival at his administrative center, the College of latest South Wales.

    On Tuesday, police alleged Mr Nizamdeen had been “set up in a deliberate and calculated approach” through Mr Khawaja.

    Mr Khawaja, who labored in the same department as Mr Nizamdeen, were partially prompted through a “non-public grievance” over a lady, police stated.

    Wrongful detainment

    Mr Nizamdeen endured greater than four weeks in solitary confinement after he was once arrested on terrorism charges.

    Police accused him of plotting the attacks in his laptop. An alleged hit record incorporated the previous Australian top minister Malcolm Turnbull and landmarks corresponding to the Sydney Opera House.

    However he used to be released in October after police failed to connect his handwriting to the writing within the notebook.

    Mr Nizamdeen, who has back to Sri Lanka, has indicated he plans to seek compensation from government for his wrongful detention.

    Australia PM seeks 14-day detention law Australia adopts UNITED KINGDOM-style security fashion

    On Tuesday, New South Wales police expressed “remorseful about” for Mr Nizamdeen’s revel in.

    “We feel very sorry for him and what has came about to him,” Assistant Commissioner Mick Prepared said.

    Mr Khawaja was arrested on Tuesday in suburban Sydney. Police had questioned him over the computing device last month.

    His brother Usman Khawaja is one among Australia’s best batsmen. he’s set to play in the take a look at series against India, starting on Thursday.

    Speaking hours after the arrest, he requested for his circle of relatives’s privacy to be revered.

    “it’s a matter for police to deal with. Out of respect for the method it will be beside the point for me to make any longer comment,” he said.

  • Australia says orphanage trafficking is up to date-day slavery

    Cambodian orphans perform their daily traditional dancing performance for foreign visitors raising donations in a non-government orphanage on September 28, 2013 in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Symbol copyright Getty Pictures Image caption Orphans appearing to lift cash in Cambodia

    Australia has turn into the first us of a in the global to recognize so-known as orphanage trafficking as a kind of modern-day slavery.

    The regulation paperwork a part of a wider pressure to prevent Australians participating in “voluntourism” schemes which hurt rather than assist the kids.

    It is expected 80% of children dwelling in the international’s orphanages have at least one dwelling parent.

    In many circumstances, they have been lured to the orphanages to attract volunteers.

    A file by means of rethink Orphanages found more than FIFTY SEVEN% of Australian universities put it on the market orphanage placements, with 14% of Australian faculties vacationing, volunteering or fundraising for institutions out of the country.

    The call for for such journeys has created an issue in South East Asia, Australian Senator Linda Reynolds stated earlier this 12 months, calling orphan tourism the “highest 21st-Century rip-off”.

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    Ms Reynolds informed the Thomson Reuters Foundation overseas guests have been left with a “sugar rush” after apparently doing one thing good – after which sharing it on social media.

    But many fail to realise their “excellent deed” is in fact fuelling an business in line with kid exploitation in different international locations round the arena.

    In impact, then-Australian International Minister Julie Bishop said in March, the children have “transform tourist sights”.

    ‘Forced to accomplish’

    Many of the youngsters found in orphanages in countries like Nepal and Cambodia come from bad backgrounds, and are passed over by their families on the promise of receiving an training, being well-cared for and smartly-fed.

    The fact is, the children are used to lift cash that often finally ends up in the pocket of the orphanage director, Chloe Setter, senior adviser on anti-trafficking and voluntourism at Lumos, a charity operating to end the issue of youngsters residing in poor high quality institutions, explained.

    According to the us State Division, “many orphanages use the kids to boost price range by means of forcing them to accomplish presentations for or engage and play with possible donors to encourage extra donations”.

    Even in the such a lot smartly-meaning of orphanages, critics say kids are often not able to thrive in an institutional surroundings, harming their development.

    Ms Setter now hopes other international locations will observe in Australia’s footsteps.

    “Australia’s regulation may also help to take orphanage trafficking out of the shadows and placed it in the spotlight on the global stage,” she stated. “We now need different nations to adopt equivalent measures and ensure their very own anti-slavery regulation protects by contrast heinous form of child trafficking.

    “We welcome this significant first step from the Australian government to tackle orphanage trafficking and we glance ahead to operating with different countries to follow their lead.”

  • ‘Asleep’ pilot overlooked destination in Australia, officers say

    A lighthouse in Devonport, Tasmania Symbol copyright Getty Pictures Symbol caption The plane took off from Devonport, in Tasmania’s north

    A small plane overshot its vacation spot in Australia via nearly 50km (30 miles) after its pilot fell asleep within the cockpit, air safety officers say.

    The pilot was the only person on board the freight flight from Devonport to King Island in Tasmania on EIGHT November.

    The incident, categorized as a case of “incapacitation”, is being investigated through the Australian Shipping Protection Bureau (ATSB).

    Officials have not said how the pilot aroused from sleep earlier than touchdown the plane safely.

    The Piper PA-31 plane, operated via Vortex Air, had been due to entire the 240km trip at 07:15 native time.

    “through the cruise, the pilot fell asleep, ensuing in the plane overflying King Island by means of FORTY SIX kilometres,” the ATSB said in a temporary remark.

    Aviation professional Neil Hansford said that Australia had strict rules in terms of pilot fatigue.

    “there is no means within the world that somebody must’ve taken on that flight fatigued,” he told the Australian Broadcasting Business Enterprise.

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    On its website online, Vortex Air says it runs charter flights for “groups, corporates and leisure travelers” round Australia.

    The ATSB mentioned it might interview the pilot and review operating techniques prior to releasing a file subsequent yr.

    Last yr, 5 other folks died whilst a airplane on its solution to King Island crashed moments after takeoff in Melbourne.

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  • Why doesn’t Australia have an indigenous treaty?

    Aboriginal elders at the opening ceremony of a summit at Uluru Image copyright Jimmy Widders Hunt Image caption Mutitjulu elders gather at Uluru for a historic summit this week

    The future of Australia’s relationship with its indigenous peoples could be significantly influenced by a meeting at Uluru this week. It will discuss changing the constitution, but may also include support for a treaty. Australia does not have one, unlike many nations, reports Trevor Marshallsea.

    In 1832, the governor of Van Diemen’s Land reflected ruefully on his colonial administration’s chaotic – and bloody – relationship with the island’s indigenous population.

    Amid a period of great conflict between white colonists and Aborigines known as the Black War, Governor George Arthur said it was “a fatal error” a treaty had not been entered into with the Aboriginal people of what’s now the Australian state of Tasmania, after white settlement had commenced some 30 years earlier.

    The absence of a treaty was cited by Mr Arthur as a crucial and aggravating factor in relations with the first inhabitants of the island, the scene of some of the worst treatment inflicted on Aborigines by British colonists.

    Almost 200 years later, Australia remains the only Commonwealth country to have never signed a treaty with its indigenous people. While treaties were established early on in other British dominions such as New Zealand, Canada and in the United States, the situation in Australia has been, often notoriously, different.

    Image copyright Jimmy Widders Hunt Image caption An Arnhem Land community leader at the opening ceremony of the First Nations Convention

    In 1988, then Prime Minister Bob Hawke was presented with “the Barunga Statement”, named after an Aboriginal community. Written on bark, it called for a treaty. The cause had been thrust forcefully into the public consciousness in the late 1980s in various ways. One was rock band Midnight Oil’s 1987 hit “Beds Are Burning”, which implored white Australia to “pay the rent, to pay our share”. Part-Aboriginal band Yothu Yindi had an international hit with “Treaty” a few years later.

    On receiving the Barunga Statement, which he had hung on a wall in Canberra’s Parliament House, Mr Hawke vowed there would be a treaty by 1990.

    In 1992, Prime Minister Paul Keating made a now-famous speech in the Aboriginal-centric Sydney suburb of Redfern, addressing harsh truths about the often brutal and murderous “dispossessing” of the country’s traditional owners.

    A year later came the watershed Native Title act, which threw out the historical view that Australia before European settlement in 1788 essentially belonged to no-one.

    And in 2008 Prime Minister Kevin Rudd delivered a long-awaited apology to Australia’s indigenous peoples, for policies that had inflicted suffering on them.

    Despite these words, acts and gestures, there is still no treaty. Also, there remain contentious sections of the nation’s constitution which are race-based, although two significant others were removed in the 1967 referendum.

    Section 25 still says states can disqualify people from voting in elections on account of their race. Section 51 (xxvi) empowers the government to legislate for “the people of any race for whom it is deemed necessary to make special laws”.

    Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Kevin Rudd hugs members of the Stolen Generations after his apology speech in 2008

    This week, marking the referendum’s 50th anniversary, an Aboriginal leaders’ summit at Uluru (formerly Ayers Rock) is hopeful of reaching consensus on whether – and how – the constitution should be changed. But some delegations are expected to make statements about the need for a treaty, and financial compensation.

    The meeting will also shine a light on white Australia’s troubled, and peculiar, historical attitude to the country’s first inhabitants.

    Australia’s distinct problem, historians say, took root from reports delivered back in England by the first white men to land on the east coast in 1770.

    “Captain James Cook and (botanist) Joseph Banks reported the Aborigines were few in number and were just wandering around the place,” says University of Sydney history professor Mark McKenna.

    Aboriginal leaders meet for historic talks Australia ‘failing’ on indigenous lives The people and history of the Torres Strait Islands

    “The perception was they had no recognisable agricultural system, and they were basically savages.”

    Thus when Admiral Arthur Phillip led the first fleet to begin the colony of New South Wales in 1788, Mr McKenna says, “there was no expectation any treaty with the locals would have to be signed. The way Australia was settled was in fact quite extraordinary.”

    Tasmanian Aboriginal writer and activist Michael Mansell told the BBC the English were deceived by their perceptions of Australian indigenous culture, including that they lived in small groups, by contrast to the large and seemingly more organised tribes of North America.

    Image copyright Getty Images Image caption The views of the first white visitors left a problematic legacy, historians say

    “To them, the Australian Aborigines didn’t display any of the trappings of a so-called noble culture,” Mr Mansell says.

    “They weren’t riding horses like the native North Americans. They didn’t have permanent dwellings. It was harder to discern who their leaders were. So they were regarded as a vulgar and backward people who could be treated as the invaders liked.

    “In 1840 colonial officials in New Zealand were sitting down with the Maoris to sign the Treaty of Waitangi. At the same time in Australia, Aborigines were being hunted down, shot and slaughtered.

    “All of this fostered a deeply entrenched cultural bias against Aboriginal people which, ever since, has been very hard to shake, both in attitudes and in a substantive way.”

    While provision was made for indigenous people in Canada’s constitution in 1867, Mr Mansell points out that “the only mention of Aborigines in Australia’s constitution of 1901 was to exclude us”.

    At that time, Australia’s first prime minister, Edmund Barton, said race-based clauses in the constitution allowed his government to “regulate the affairs of the people of coloured or inferior races who are in the Commonwealth”.

    Little changed in attitudes in the ensuing years. This, Mr Mansell says, was partly due to a widespread belief that the Aboriginal race would simply die out, and be bred in amongst the European community, and because of the country’s so-called “White Australia” policy on immigration. Existing in various forms from 1901 until 1973, the policy, though aimed at immigrants, did little to promote acceptance and cultural sensitivity.

    Image copyright Getty Images Image caption A crowd watches the apology to the Stolen Generations in 2008

    While the 1980s and early 1990s brought attitudinal change, the plight of Aborigines was set back, Mr McKenna and Mr Mansell agree, under the conservative John Howard government of 1996-2007.

    Contrasting Mr Keating’s Redfern Speech, Mr Howard said he would not take a “black armband” view of Australia’s history on Aboriginal relations.

    In 2000 he said a country “does not make a treaty with itself”. And in 2004 he announced the abolition of the peak government body handling indigenous issues, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), following corruption investigations.

    “John Howard shut the Aboriginal movement down completely,” Mr Mansell says. “ATSIC had its problems, but it was a sound moral concept. There’s been plenty of crooked MPs, but they don’t shut down parliament.”

    Still, despite Australia’s troubled past on indigenous matters, and fears from government and business on the implications of a treaty, of financial compensation, or of official recognition of Aboriginal sovereignty over Australian lands, Mr Mansell is “very optimistic” substantive change can be sparked by this week’s summit.

    “What we need is a clear plan capable of being adopted by governments which will not interfere with the rest of Australia but will give empowerment to Aborigines, and give land back to those who can’t get it under the Native Title Act,” Mr Mansell said.

    With Australia’s constitution difficult to change, many agree a more pressing need is the establishment of a national representative body allowing Aborigines to make their own decisions on matters affecting them, rather than have decisions forced on them from Canberra.

    “A treaty would break the 200-year-old cycle of governments not negotiating with the Aboriginal people,” says Mr McKenna, adding it would provide a framework for how negotiations are held on indigenous issues such as welfare, employment, education, health and land ownership.

    “It would say ‘we’re no longer just going to do things to them’, but that they’re included and empowered.”

  • Bill Leak dies: A brilliant cartoonist who polarised Australia

    Bill Leak poses in front of two painting of Australian comedian Barry Humphries Image copyright News Corp Australia Image caption Bill Leak has been celebrated for his wit and distinctive style

    Loved and loathed, he was to his admirers a genius of wit and originality who confronted tough topics, while to his detractors he fuelled race tensions and polarised a nation.

    Bill Leak, who created some of Australia’s most recognisable and inflammatory cartoons, has died of a suspected heart attack in hospital. He was 61.

    Last year, his caricature of an indigenous man with a beer can who could not remember his son’s name was labelled “disgusting” and “discriminatory” by Aboriginal leaders. The artist had also faced death threats and was forced to move out of his home after publishing an image of the Prophet Muhammad following the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris.

    “[He was] a giant in his field of cartooning and portraiture and a towering figure for more than two decades,” said Paul Whittaker, editor-in-chief of The Australian newspaper, where Mr Leak worked.

    The cartoonist was born in Adelaide but raised near Sydney, where he trained at the Julian Ashton Art School in the city’s historic Rocks district. He would later travel to Europe to soak up the region’s art, and it was in the early 1980s that he got his big break with The Bulletin magazine.

    Image caption Bill Leak’s most controversial cartoon sparked a racial discrimination complaint last year

    “He had terrific control over the pen. He also had a mind which seemed uncontrollable. It would go in any direction and he was totally unpredictable, so it was combination of his drawing skills and his quirky sense of humour,” Mr Foyle told the BBC.

    “I don’t think Bill was ever surprised about the controversy he caused. He enjoyed it and on many occasions tailored his cartoons to cause a stink. Bill enjoyed being in the limelight.”

    Mr Leak won nine Walkley awards that recognise journalistic excellence in Australia, and had worked for Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp Australia newspapers since 1994.

    His distinctive style won many fans, but he often drew intense criticism for his views – particularly in recent years. Last year’s depiction of the indigenous man sparked a complaint to Australia’s Human Rights Commission, with a claim it had violated a controversial race discrimination law.

    One indigenous advocacy group at the time called the “disgusting, disrespectful, and hurtful”, adding: “Those involved in publishing such a clearly racist cartoon should be ashamed and should issue a public apology to all Australians.”

    Emotional reactions

    Tributes on social media have praised his fearlessness, lamenting the loss of an artist who was “supremely talented, principled, brave, witty & decent”, and “a true warrior for freedom of speech”.

    Others, though, had far more brutal assessments. Several posts after his death did not just attack Mr Leak’s views, but the cartoonist personally – demonstrating how polarising he had become within sections of the community. Others swiftly condemned the critical posts.

    Image copyright @annabelcrabb Image copyright @JacquiLambie

    Those close to Mr Leak say while he made a career rattling cages, an avalanche of criticism of his work in recent years had become too heavy a burden.

    “Basically he was hounded to his death. He’s had the most incredibly stressful couple of years,” Spectator Australia editor and long-time friend Rowan Dean told the BBC.

    “There were death threats after he did a cartoon that showed the Prophet Muhammad, which led to him having to move his house. He was Australia’s version of Salman Rushdie for a while.”

    ‘Racist’ cartoon draws praise and criticism The racial discrimination law dividing Australia

    “He did a very poignant but accurate cartoon about Indigenous Australians, disadvantage and the lack of parenting amongst Indigenous Australians and for that he was hounded mercilessly by our Australian Human Rights Commission. The pressure that he was under was just enormous.”

    Defending his cartoon at the time, Mr Leak wrote: “I was trying to say that if you think things are pretty crook for the children locked up in the Northern Territory’s Don Dale Youth Detention Centre, you should have a look at the homes they came from.”

    Image caption Leak’s final cartoon accused education minister Rob Stokes of ignoring radicalisation in Australian schools

    Many of his fellow cartoonists share the thought that Mr Leak was pilloried to the point of submission.

    Mark Tippett, a Sydney-based caricature artist, told the BBC that his death was a terrible reminder of the battles they often face.

    “What do we do as satirists if we can’t satire anymore?” he asked. “Do we have to ask permission before we can put pen to paper? It just can’t go on this way. It [his death] makes us more defiant. We can’t go into a shell.”

    “What he was trying to do is make his messages as simplistic as possible for many people to understand. His style would appeal to the masses because it was so clean and recognisable. You just don’t see that every day.”

    Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has remembered his friend of more than 30 years.

    “I can’t believe that Bill Leak is dead,” Mr Turnbull posted on Facebook. “Who had more life, more energy than him? So many more cartoons to draw, paintings to paint, politicians to satirise.”

    Image copyright ABC Image caption Mr Leak in a recent interview on Australian television

    Indigenous leader Warren Mundine said Mr Leak “was just an incredible cartoonist”. He told the Australian Broadcasting Corp: “I’m just in shock. I was only with him the other night at his book launch and had a beer with him.”

    Left behind are the cartoonist’s wife Goong, his stepdaughter Tasha and his sons Johannes and Jasper.

    His friends have remember a gifted man.

    “Bill was an absolute genius,” said Mr Dean. “Here was a man who was one of Australia’s greatest political talents. Probably one of the world’s greatest satirists, certainly a brilliant cartoonist and also a brilliant portrait painter.”

  • US girl jailed for smuggling cocaine in high heels

    One of Woodrum's shoes on an airport scale Symbol copyright AUSTRALIAN BORDER PRESSURE Symbol caption Cocaine used to be found inside Denise Marie Woodrum’s sneakers and different items

    A US girl who said she was once tricked by means of a faux internet suitor into smuggling medication into Australia has been jailed.

    Denise Marie Woodrum, FIFTY ONE, used to be arrested at Sydney Airport closing yr after border officials found cocaine crammed inside of high heels and different property in her luggage.

    In January, she pleaded to blame to the illegal import however instructed the courtroom she was once a sufferer of a web based romance scam.

    A judge found she had willingly participated within the operation.

    On Thursday, the new South Wales District Courtroom sentenced Woodrum, from Missouri, to a maximum of 7-and-a-half years in prison.

    “I don’t accept that she is in actuality contrite for her offending as opposed to being sorry for the placement she now reveals herself caught in,” said Judge Penelope Wass, consistent with the Sydney Morning Herald.

    Scam argument

    Her legal professional, Rebecca Neil, had defined her client as a deeply spiritual and socially isolated lady who have been groomed via a person on-line, the newspaper stated.

    That individual, who went by the identify Hendrik Cornelius, exploited Woodrum’s consider for financial gain, Ms Neil mentioned.

    Woodrum had visited South The Usa sometime sooner than embarking at the shuttle to Australia with 756 grams of cocaine, the court docket heard.

    She had advised government that she had no knowledge of the drugs and “it used to be imagined to be simply clothes”, the Australian Related Press reported.

    However Pass Judgement On Wass mentioned she was not yes by means of Woodrum’s story, and mentioned the defendant had proven little regret for her “reckless actions”.

    Woodrum will probably be eligible for parole after four-and-a-half years.

  • Uber to block low-rating riders in Australia and New Zealand

    A mobile screen shows the Uber app asking a rider to rate their trip with a driver Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Uber asks passengers and drivers to review every travel to form an individual consumer score

    Uber is to dam customers in Australia and New Zealand from its experience carrier if they have a low passenger score.

    Riders rated 4-out-of-5 stars or decrease shall be banned for six months. Scores are according to comments left through drivers after every journey.

    The move is aimed toward making improvements to passenger behaviour, the corporate mentioned.

    Uber instructed the BBC that Australia and New Zealand have been identified as a spot to bring in the rule of thumb after comments shape drivers.

    The same coverage used to be offered in Brazil earlier this this 12 months, Uber said, however it is the first time the control has been rolled out in an English-talking market.

    An Uber spokeswoman declined to be drawn on exactly how many of its 2.8 million customers in Australia and New Zealand currently had ratings of beneath 4.0 – however conceded it was once handiest “a few thousand”.

    The “overwhelming majority” – believed to be greater than 90% – had scores of at least 4.5, the corporate mentioned.

    The policy will kick in on 19 September and passengers will receive several warnings ahead of they’re banned.

    What lowers your rating?

    Susan Anderson, basic director of Uber in Australia and New Zealand, stated riders with a 4.0 ranking or below might have won a host of 1-star opinions from drivers.

    “Those are the small percentage of riders who’re constantly no longer treating drivers with respect,” she instructed Channel Seven’s Daybreak programme on Wednesday.

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    She said drivers anticipated basic courtesy from riders. Bad behaviour included customers now not being at their select-up spot, or organising pick out-ups in hazardous spaces at the highway.

    “Be well mannered and considerate. Take your garbage with you and do not make a multitude in the automobile,” Ms Anderson mentioned.

    The corporate despatched out a host of how one can customers closing month aimed toward improving purchaser ratings.

  • Sinead McNamara: Australian influencer dies on Greece yacht

    Sinead McNamara Symbol copyright SINEAD MCNAMARA/INSTAGRAM Symbol caption Greek government are investigating the demise of Australian woman Sinead McNamara

    Pals and family have paid tribute to an Instagram blogger who died in Greece while working on a billionaire’s yacht.

    Sinead McNamara, 20, from Australia was present in a important situation on the vessel on Thursday, and died even as being airlifted to hospital.

    Greek authorities have launched an investigation into her final hours on the boat, which used to be docked on the island of Kefalonia.

    The super-yacht is owned through Mexican mining wealthy person Alberto Bailleres.

    Mr Bailleres and his family had left the Mayan Queen IV boat days ahead of the incident, Greek news retailers pronounced.

    The cases of her dying remain unclear. Greek media said government had ordered that the yacht stay within the port of Argostoli even as investigations happen.

    Most Effective the boat’s crew have been on board whilst Ms McNamara used to be discovered subconscious and “twisted in rope” at the rear of the boat, The Australian newspaper said.

    Her cousin instructed the Day-To-Day Telegraph newspaper that the circle of relatives didn’t realize the reason behind the demise however believed it should have been a boating accident.

    The newspaper suggested that Ms McNamara’s mother and sister had already been on their way to Greece to visit her after they received information of the tragedy.

  • Malcolm Turnbull: Australian ex-PM ‘to hand over parliament’

    Malcolm Turnbull holds and granddaughter Alice in his final press conference as prime minister on Friday Symbol copyright EPA Image caption Malcolm Turnbull with granddaughter Alice at his ultimate press briefing as PM on Friday

    Malcolm Turnbull has said he will give up Australia’s parliament on Friday following his ouster as prime minister by way of party competitors, local media report.

    Mr Turnbull was changed by way of Scott Morrison closing week in a bid to finish infighting that had crippled the centre-right executive.

    The ousted leader stated Australians could be “appalled” by way of up to date occasions.

    His departure will trigger a by means of-election and place Mr Morrison’s parliamentary majority at risk.

    In explaining his decision, Mr Turnbull once more took a thinly veiled swipe at his predecessor, Tony Abbott – who have been accused of undermining the government.

    “Former high ministers are highest out of parliament now not in it, and that i suppose latest occasions best possible underline the worth of that observation,” Mr Turnbull instructed birthday party contributors on Monday, in a speech said via multiple outlets.

    Without Mr Turnbull, Mr Morrison will command 75 of a discounted 149 seats in the Space of Representatives.

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    A via-election for Mr Turnbull’s seat will in all probability take place in October, Australian media mentioned.

    If the federal government loses the seat, Mr Morrison shall be compelled to rely on independents to pass regulation in a ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-member parliament. The Labor opposition lately has SIXTY NINE seats.

    Media playback is unsupported to your software

    Media captionCan someone cling on to Australia’s best process?

    The seat, Wentworth, has been held by means of the conservative Liberal Birthday Party considering the fact that World Struggle Two. However, a few say victory for the government is not guaranteed.

    In a further twist, Mr Abbott’s sister, Christine Forster, is pronounced to be regarded as operating for the seat – but will have to first be decided on by way of the Liberal Birthday Party.

    Abbott and sister’s homosexual marriage row is going public

    The next normal election is as a result of be held by Would Possibly, with opinion polls these days giving Labor the lead.

    (more…)

  • Australia asylum: Why is it controversial?

    Boat of asylum seekers off Christmas Island (June 2012)Image copyright Reuters Image caption Masses have died trying to reach Australia in inadequate and overcrowded boats

    Australia’s policy on asylum seekers has come underneath severe scrutiny. The BBC explains why.

    Does Australia get so much of asylum seekers?

    Australia’s humanitarian intake has remained quite steady over the closing twenty years, with round 12,000 to 13,000 other people in most cases ordinary yearly.

    In 2015-16, Australia conventional 13,750 other people thru its humanitarian programme and has devoted to accepting an extra 12,000 refugees fleeing Syria and Iraq.

    Asylum seekers have attempted to reach Australia on boats from Indonesia, frequently paying huge sums of money to folks smugglers. Loads have died making the damaging adventure.

    At its top, 18,000 other folks arrived in Australia illegally through sea. however the numbers plummeted after the federal government offered tough new policies to “forestall the boats”.

    Symbol copyright AFP Image caption Asylum seekers were sent again in lifeboats

    So why does Australia have tough asylum insurance policies?

    Australia’s two leading political events, the ruling Liberal-National coalition and the Labor competition, both improve tough asylum policies.

    They say the adventure the asylum seekers make is unhealthy and regulated by way of prison gangs, they usually have a duty to prevent it.

    The coalition executive made Australia’s asylum policy even more difficult when it took power in 2013, introducing Operation Sovereign Borders, which placed the army in control of asylum operations.

    Under this policy army vessels patrol Australian waters and intercept migrant boats, towing them again to Indonesia or sending asylum seekers back in inflatable dinghies or lifeboats.

    The executive says its insurance policies have restored the integrity of its borders, and helped prevent deaths at sea.

    Then Again, critics say competition to asylum is normally racially stimulated and is harmful Australia’s reputation.

    what’s the deal with offshore processing?

    Image copyright Handout Symbol caption The camps on PNG and Nauru are arguable, with activists condemning living stipulations

    While asylum seekers succeed in Australia by boat, they’re not held in Australia whilst their claims are processed.

    As An Alternative, they’re despatched to an offshore processing centre. Recently Australia has one such centre at the Pacific island nation of Nauru and some other on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea.

    Even if those asylum seekers are discovered to be refugees, they are not allowed to be settled in Australia. they’ll be settled in Nauru or Papua New Guinea, and four were settled in Cambodia at a stated cost of A$55m (£28m, $42m).

    Rights workforce say conditions within the PNG and Nauru camps are totally insufficient, citing negative hygiene, cramped stipulations, unrelenting heat and a scarcity of amenities.

    Manus Island closure: What occurs subsequent?

    Symbol copyright Getty Photographs Symbol caption Sri Lanka charged asylum seekers sent back by Australia with leaving the country illegally

    Papua New Guinea’s Excellent Court dominated in April that limiting the movement of asylum seekers who’ve committed no crime was unconstitutional.

    The u . s .’s top minister has since demanded that Australia shut down the centre.

    But Australia is not prepared to simply accept the 850 males held within the centre and it is not clear the place they are going to be taken

    What next for Manus Island asylum seekers?

    The likely closure of Manus Island means that asylum seekers could be relocated to Nauru, which says it has additional room.

    Or they may well be taken to the Australian territory of Christmas Island, the place there is an current detention centre.

    Alternatively, Australia’s exhausting line on immigration is not going to change.