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3 votes
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Suspected asylum seekers found in Daintree in far north Queensland, authorities say
2 votes -
Huawei banned from 5G mobile infrastructure rollout in Australia
10 votes -
How to build an observation hive part 1 - Episode 82: "View hive"
4 votes -
Australia's barbaric policy confronted by Behrouz Boochani's prison memoir
Summary The article is an interview with Behrouz Boochani, a Kurdish refugee who has been detained by the Australian government on Manus Island since 2015. Boochani discusses his experiences of...
Summary
The article is an interview with Behrouz Boochani, a Kurdish refugee who has been detained by the Australian government on Manus Island since 2015. Boochani discusses his experiences of detention and the book he has written about those experiences.
Extract
I don't remember exactly when I started to write the first words but I remember that I thought my writing of this time was like a mission and duty ... to make readers aware of this prison camp. I imagined there would be unknown readers from around the world ... That's why I wrote it in a literary language. Not only for this historical period or those people who are involved in this plight ... I wrote this book so that it extends beyond geographical bounds and generational imaginaries.
This chapter about the way they exiled us to Manus was one of the hardest parts to write … If you remember, years ago, I wrote a letter to you and complained that I was scared of writing, that I hate writing. You answered me, saying: ‘Behrouz I wrote about my relatives who were killed.’ Your grandparents, aunties, uncles, cousins … I knew that I had to do it to survive. I knew that I could expose this system through these words … I could get back my identity through writing this book and not allowing this system to reduce me to a number.
Link
4 votes -
Over 1400 Western Australian government officials used 'Password123' as their password
27 votes -
Scott Morrison is the new Prime Minister of Australia
Key points: The petition for a party room meeting of the Liberal Party got 43 signatures, so Turnbull allowed the meeting to be called. The party room voted 45:40 to spill the leadership. Three...
Key points:
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The petition for a party room meeting of the Liberal Party got 43 signatures, so Turnbull allowed the meeting to be called.
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The party room voted 45:40 to spill the leadership.
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Three candidates nominated: Peter Dutton, Scott Morrison, Julie Bishop.
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Bishop was eliminated in the first round of voting.
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Morrison won the second round of voting against Dutton, 45:40.
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As the leader of the Liberal Party, Morrison becomes the new Prime Minister... probably. It now depends on whether their coalition partners, the National Party, support the new Liberal leader (but they probably will: the alternative is to lose government).
EDIT1: And Josh Frydenburg is the deputy leader of the Liberal Party. That does not make him the Deputy Prime Minister: that role goes to the leader of the National Party whenever the Coalition is in government.
EDIT2: The news: http://mobile.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-24/scott-morrison-wins-leaderal-leadership/10160168
Follow live here: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-24/live-turnbull-leadership-challenge-looms/10159462
Some background on Scott Morrison: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-24/scott-morrisons-rise-to-prime-minister-of-australia/10160458
20 votes -
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Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has ditched his commitment to legislate for an emissions reduction target as he scrambles to save his leadership.
10 votes -
Malcolm Turnbull removes all climate change targets from energy policy in fresh bid to save leadership
13 votes -
Bandidos informant granted refugee status by Canada after cover blown in Australia
4 votes -
Drought assistance to be dramatically ramped up by Turnbull Government
5 votes -
Gun law changes dropped by Tasmanian Liberals following community backlash
7 votes -
‘You don’t belong to my country either.’ How two Noongar boys spoke up, a world away from home.
7 votes -
A landmark ruling that has granted a casual worker annual leave entitlements has sparked warnings from unions and employer groups that a clearer definition of casual employment is needed.
6 votes -
Hotter, drier summers in Australia mean longer fire seasons – and urban sprawl into bushland is putting more people at risk
7 votes -
King Gizzard and The Lizard Wizard (2018)
6 votes -
The Indian-Australian millennials who are choosing arranged marriage
5 votes -
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has secured the support of an overwhelming majority of Liberal and Nationals MPs for his energy policy.
4 votes -
Australia's crypto-busting bill still on the table
6 votes -
Coles 'bagflip' fiasco highlights the need for Australian legislation
5 votes -
Electricity prices are falling - and will keep doing so - whether or not energy deal is inked
4 votes -
Why I love my library and you should too
14 votes -
Daniel Ricciardo confirmed to leave Red Bull Racing at the end of 2018, moving to Renault
15 votes -
States give conditional support to National Energy Guarantee, but more talks to come
2 votes -
Australia's population to hit twenty-five million, newest resident likely to be young, female, and Chinese
8 votes -
Is the door too open or too closed when it comes to population?
2 votes -
'Parasites': Restaurants ask customers to shun services like Uber Eats
11 votes -
Energy deal in limbo as states step up their demands
1 vote -
Australian unions seek to end religious bodies' right to discriminate in hiring
11 votes -
Pink cancels some Australian concert dates after hospitalization
4 votes -
'Damoclean sword': Michaela Banerji is still fighting after five years. The former Immigration Department official said her sacking after a tweet "drove a stake" through her.
3 votes -
The federal government's My Health Record system is capable of storing genomic information, which could turbocharge medical research but has intensified privacy and security fears
5 votes -
'Insulting': Women's footy pioneer Susan Alberti slams proposed shorter AFLW season
4 votes -
How planting trees and grasses can help stabilise farmland in a changing climate
10 votes -
Foodora announced on Thursday it would stop operating in Australia by the end of August
2 votes -
Plastic toys vs plastic bags: Coles' Little Shop drove Australian bag backflip
2 votes -
Transgender teenager Aliza Johnson tackles discrimination in regional town
6 votes -
My Health concessions 'woefully inadequate', says former Australian Medical Association president
3 votes -
Australia's Coles caves and will give away free plastic bags indefinitely
7 votes -
Inside the new cyber centre training Australia's (online) frontline
3 votes -
Competition regulator to assess Nine's proposed takeover of Fairfax for impact on media diversity
3 votes -
Good Morning - Escalator (2018)
2 votes -
The brutal legacy of Sister Kate's, a children's home with a mission to 'breed out the black'
10 votes -
The Federal Government will change the law to reassure Australians their privacy will be protected in the My Health Record system
4 votes -
The rise of the downloadable gun in America could have dark implications for Australia
4 votes -
Why Australia wants to build its own 'Belt and Road' scheme with Japan and the US to rival China's investment
3 votes -
Writing from Manus prison: a scathing critique of domination and oppression. Behrouz Boochani spent almost five years typing passages of his book into a mobile phone. The result resists classification
9 votes -
Australians are becoming more progressive in their views on gender roles, but there is still a long way to go before we achieve gender equality in the home.
4 votes -
Hidden power: Sydney dump to turn plastic into fuel
6 votes -
Australians are 'rightly' concerned about trusting My Health Record, says Privacy Commissioner
4 votes