Australia news live: Senate antisemitism inquiry told of swastikas and safety fears at University of Sydney; Myer profit falls as fashion brands flop

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Jewish students being singled out, spat on and ‘fearing for their safety’, inquiry told

Caitlin Cassidy

Caitlin Cassidy

Jewish students are being singled out, spat on, removing identifiable symbols and “fearing for their safety”, a Senate inquiry has heard.

President of the Australasian Union of Jewish Students (AUJS), Noah Loven, told the inquiry into antisemitism on campuses that the current situation was “untenable”.

We are in a crisis and this crisis has gone on for far too long. Some have stepped up but others have allowed this hate to fester … letting Jewish students fend for themselves.

Loven said not all criticism of Israel was antisemitic but “some undeniably crosses the line”.

We fully support the right to protest but when protests glorify violence against Jews, insult or harass them, deface campuses with swastikas, it crosses a line.

Assoc Prof Efrat Eilam, from the Australian Academic Alliance against Antisemitism, said staff and students were being subjugated to a “Jewish cancel culture”.

The two bodies have backed a judicial inquiry, with the AUJS noting the situation had become “politicised” and a unified response was necessary to draw a line.

The inquiry has received more than 600 submissions, with some Jewish community members citing antisemitism and others noting heightened levels of Islamophobia and expressing concern over conflation with antisemitism and criticism of Israel.

Australasian Union of Jewish Students president Noah Loven.
Australasian Union of Jewish Students president Noah Loven. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

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Australia marks 25th anniversary of East Timor service

Today marks 25 years since Australian troops were first deployed to Timor-Leste.

Around 5,500 Australian service personnel were sent in 1999, the largest deployment of Australian troops since the Vietnam War, after the Timorese voted for independence from Indonesia in 1999.

The minister for defence personnel, Matt Keogh, said in a statement:

We pay tribute to the six Australians who tragically lost their lives while deployed, or as a result of their service. We also recognise the remarkable resilience of the Timorese people and the enduring friendship between our two nations.

We are grateful to the many Australians who served in Timor-Leste who have regularly returned over these 25 years, strengthening the bonds and productivity of local communities.

As commemorative services are held all over Australia, we thank all who served and continue to serve to this day.

A commemorative service has been taking place at the Australian Peacekeeping Memorial on Anzac Parade in Canberra, where Keogh is delivering an address. We’ll bring you more from this, and photos from the service, as they filter through.

Stephanie Convery

Stephanie Convery

Advocates fear government’s support at home provisions based on misleading data

Advocates for older people have expressed fears that the federal government’s support at home provisions in its new aged care bill are based on misleading data, in the wake of a report today from Anglicare.

Anglicare Australia surveyed home and community care providers servicing 28,000 older people. All those providers reported being unable to meet the demand for at-home services under the commonwealth home support programme within their community.

Describing the current funding model as “restrictive and rationed”, the report also noted, as Guardian Australia has previously reported, that the government’s published wait times for the more substantial home care packages do not include the time it takes for a person to be assessed or reassessed. Current wait times exceed 15 months for some packages.

You can read more about the way the home care funding model currently works and why older people and their advocates have been pushing so hard for the new model here:

In announcing the new aged care act last week, the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, said the new model would reduce wait times for in-home care, with a target of a three-month wait by July 2027.

Corey Irlam, acting chief executive of older person’s advocacy organisation Cota, said that benchmark needed to include all aspects of the waiting process, including the wait for assessment.

We’re not talking about a difference of a week here and there – we’re talking about many, many months of an older person’s life. With reports of around 10,000 people dying a year on the waitlist, sadly that’s often time people don’t have.

Not only will we be pushing the government to ensure it’s not fudging the figures on how long people are actually waiting for care, but we’ll also be calling on the Parliament to ensure the new Aged Care Act has a legal requirement for Government to publish a full waitlist report making the entire waiting journey transparent from application until your aged care services commence.

Myer profit falls as brands underperform

Jonathan Barrett

Jonathan Barrett

Department store chain Myer has suffered a steep fall in full-year profit, with the result weighed down by weak sales in underperforming brands Sass & Bide, Marcs and David Lawrence.

Myer posted a $52.6m net profit result for 2023-24, according to results released today, down 26% from a year earlier. Sales also fell, dragged lower by store closures.

The company attributed the fall in profit to challenging trading conditions, inflationary cost pressures and underperformance of various fashion labels.

Myer’s executive chair, Olivia Wirth, said:

Today’s result reflects the challenging macroeconomic environment for Australian retailers.

The recent earnings season showed that consumers were reducing their spending on many discretionary items, with furniture and clothing retailers among the most affected.

Myer disclosed that about half of its decline in net profit was attributable to the underperformance of brands Sass & Bide, Marcs and David Lawrence.

A Myer store in Melbourne.
A Myer store in Melbourne. Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP

The NSW government says it will accept a recommendation put forward by the Industrial Relations Commission as pay negotiations continue with the Nurses and Midwives’ Association.

Nurses and midwives walked off the job across the state for 12 hours earlier this month, after demands for a 15% pay rise this year were rebuffed.

In a statement this morning, NSW health minister Ryan Park said the IRC had recommended both parties enter four weeks of intensive discussions.

The IRC recommends NSW Health pay nurses an interim 3% increase, back-paid to 1 July this year, contingent on the industrial action ceasing. Park said:

The Government will accept this, and has notified the Association of its intention to do so, on the basis the Association also agrees to the recommendation.

Park said this is “an opportunity for nurses to receive increased pay and patients to continue to receive care while the broader dispute is in the process of being resolved by the parties.”

Lithium-ion batteries ‘fastest growing fire risk’ in NSW, says Fire and Rescue

Fire and Rescue NSW says that lithium-ion batteries are the “fastest growing fire risk” in the state.

Since 1 January this year, FRNSW says it has attended more than 210 lithium-ion battery fires where people were injured and property severely damaged, with two fatalities.

This comes as the firefighting agency says it recorded 12 preventable residential fire deaths across NSW this winter – an increase of four on last year’s fatality rate.

There were 1,001 residential fires and 105 people injured this winter according to FRNSW, who released the following data:

In 422 cases, fires broke out in kitchens, 95 in the bedroom, 79 in lounge rooms and 51 in chimneys.

The leading cause of residential fires was human activity (494) followed by arson (138), undetermined causes (123), electrical faults (77) and overheating (40).

Firefighters attend after ebike with lithium-ion batteries catches fire in Sydney unit – video

FRNSW commissioner Jeremy Fewtrell said the statistics reinforce the importance of having a working smoke alarm:

In almost half of all fires we attend each winter, there is no smoke alarm or it is not in working order. These figures are very sobering and should be a wake-up call for people to take home fire safety seriously.

Senior constable charged with allegedly supplying prohibited drugs

A police officer has been charged with allegedly supplying prohibited drugs in southern New South Wales, police said in a statement.

Following extensive inquiries, a search warrant was executed at a home in Wagga Wagga yesterday where a number of items were seized for forensic examination.

A 36-year-old male senior constable – attached to a command within the southern region – was arrested and taken to Wagga Wagga police station. He was charged with three counts of supplying prohibited drugs and knowingly dealing in proceeds of crime.

The man was granted conditional bail to appear before Wagga Wagga local court on 13 November. The man is suspended with pay and his employment status is under review.

Jewish students being singled out, spat on and ‘fearing for their safety’, inquiry told

Caitlin Cassidy

Caitlin Cassidy

Jewish students are being singled out, spat on, removing identifiable symbols and “fearing for their safety”, a Senate inquiry has heard.

President of the Australasian Union of Jewish Students (AUJS), Noah Loven, told the inquiry into antisemitism on campuses that the current situation was “untenable”.

We are in a crisis and this crisis has gone on for far too long. Some have stepped up but others have allowed this hate to fester … letting Jewish students fend for themselves.

Loven said not all criticism of Israel was antisemitic but “some undeniably crosses the line”.

We fully support the right to protest but when protests glorify violence against Jews, insult or harass them, deface campuses with swastikas, it crosses a line.

Assoc Prof Efrat Eilam, from the Australian Academic Alliance against Antisemitism, said staff and students were being subjugated to a “Jewish cancel culture”.

The two bodies have backed a judicial inquiry, with the AUJS noting the situation had become “politicised” and a unified response was necessary to draw a line.

The inquiry has received more than 600 submissions, with some Jewish community members citing antisemitism and others noting heightened levels of Islamophobia and expressing concern over conflation with antisemitism and criticism of Israel.

Australasian Union of Jewish Students president Noah Loven.
Australasian Union of Jewish Students president Noah Loven. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

University of Sydney one of 'worst places' to be Jewish student, Senate inquiry told

Caitlin Cassidy

Caitlin Cassidy

The University of Sydney is one of the “worst places” to be a Jewish student, a Senate inquiry has heard.

Asked about management’s response to an ongoing pro-Palestine encampment, national vice president of the Australasian Union of Jewish Students, Zachary Morris, said the university was “one of the worst places” to be a Jewish student, adding the vice chancellor had “failed his students”.

We have tried repeatedly to engage, after the first meeting his chief of staff had to apologise for his behaviour as soon as he left the office … The issue is no longer with what is happening with students, the issue is with how the administration has responded.

If it was just about flags we wouldn’t be here … there’s a marked reduction in attendance.

Morris cited graffiti of swastikas in a tunnel left for two weeks, students being filmed and receiving death threats and academics “terrified to leave their offices”. In June, the university instructed protestors to disband their encampment, and have since enacted a strict Campus Access Policy requiring additional approval for some protests.

Jewish groups and vice chancellors will be among those to appear at the Senate inquiry today into shadow education minister Sarah Henderson’s private senator’s bill to establish a judicial inquiry into antisemitism on campuses.

Henderson said there had been a “failure of leadership” from vice chancellors who had allowed “hate and incitement to run rampant over many months”.

Here’s a look at today’s weather forecasts across the country, thanks to the Bureau of Meteorology:

Portable wi-fi stations to support disaster-hit communities in NSW

The NSW government is rolling out portable tech to deliver back-up internet connectivity during natural disasters, AAP reports, so communities and emergency responders can stay connected.

The technology includes trailer-mounted, solar-powered satellite internet stations that can provide wi-fi coverage to a roughly 500 metre radius. There are four portable connectivity units on the way that can be combined to cover a larger area.

The units will also be available in Service NSW disaster recovery centres, alongside a satellite-equipped vehicle so the agency can set up temporary offices with internet access.

The supplied connectivity will also be handy for contacting family members, applying for government support and lodging insurance claims after disaster events.

The government is investing about $5m in the new technology, which will be delivered this summer.

Rishworth questioned on calls for total ban on gambling advertising

Moving to calls for a total ban on gambling advertising, Amanda Rishworth was asked why the government won’t accept this recommendation.

She said the government has “introduced bet stop [and] activity statements”, so are “looking at the evidence of what actually makes a difference”.

Now, when it comes to the late Peta Murphy’s report, we’re of course working through those recommendations. 21 of those recommendations have really significant interactions or require co-governance with states and territories, and I’m working with my state and territory colleagues about how we progress many of these recommendations.

So, this is a joint effort. But to suggest we haven’t been doing anything is just not right. We have taken the most significant action.

What about comments from health experts that banning gambling ads would go further to tackle the scourge of problem gambling and help families? Rishworth said “we’re looking at that recommendation very closely” and repeated that she was working with state and territory colleagues.

Asked when a decision on this is expected, she repeated a similar answer:

We’re working through all the issues. I continue to talk with my state and territory colleagues, and we’ll keep working on this.

Rishworth defends jobseeker increase

Asked if the government should do more to increase JobSeeker – going up roughly a dollar to $56 a day, still well below the Henderson poverty line – Amanda Rishworth said:

In terms of those on the lowest incomes, we’re very focused on supporting those people. Many people on JobSeeker will also get Commonwealth rent assistance. They will also benefit from our freeze to medicines, will benefit two years in a row from our $300 discount on energy bills.

So, these are a suite of measures. We’ll always look at where we can better support people. Part of that is making sure that we do every budget look at what we can budget for. At the same time as making sure we’re not adding to the inflation challenge. That’s the balance we’re doing.

Social Services minister Amanda Rishworth.
Social Services minister Amanda Rishworth. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

Amanda Rishworth questioned on increase to rent assistance

The minister for social services, Amanda Rishworth, was also on ABC News Breakfast to discuss the increase to jobseeker and rent assistance from today.

She was asked about those comments from Dr Cassandra Goldie (see earlier posts) that while extra money is welcome for people receiving government payments, rent increases for a single person is only $1.64 a day.

Is that enough? Rishworth responded:

Obviously it’s a 12% increase in the support of rent assistance on those maximum rates. But since we’ve had come to government, people have had $2,000 on average extra in rent assistance for those receiving commonwealth rent assistance.

The minister said this “helped to drive down rents across the board” and is “not the only measure”.

Free weekend trains in Sydney in bid to support football finals amid industrial action

Sydney’s business community is pleading with rail workers to call off industrial action ahead of meetings to confirm travel arrangements for this weekend’s footy finals, AAP reports.

The Rail, Tram and Bus Union failed to reach a breakthrough in emergency talks with the NSW government and threatened to not provide the extra services needed for a marquee weekend of sport.

In Sydney there are NRL and AFL finals – including the Swans’ sold-out game against Port Adelaide at the SCG – and the Bledisloe Cup rugby union fixture.

The metro extension south from Sydenham could be derailed if the NSW government doesn’t reach a pay agreement with transport union.
The metro extension south from Sydenham could be derailed if the NSW government doesn’t reach a pay agreement with transport union. Photograph: Belad Al-Karkhey/AAP

The state’s transport minister Jo Haylen says trains will be free on the weekend, a concession to the union hoped to allow for timetable changes so special event services can run. She told ABC Radio today:

One of the bans that the union has put in place is around altering the timetable, so that means no ability for Sydney Trains to run those special event services.

[The union and Sydney Trains] are meeting now and we’re hopeful that given we have opened the gates … that we will be able to insert those special event services to get people out to Sydney Olympic Park.

Acoss wants jobseeker lifted to same rate as pension

Q: I know you’ve been pressuring the government on the jobseeker front for many years now. What ideally would you like to see the figure increased to, per week?

Acoss CEO Dr Cassandra Goldie said:

We have consistently said that payment needs to go up to the same rate as the pension, so it would go from $56 per day now to $82 per day.

This is a modest increase. It was recommended that we get a substantial increase to jobseeker … repeatedly by the independent Economic Inclusion Advisory Committee which was created by the Labor government.

Very generous tax cuts were delivered for people on higher incomes, and here we are today with again a couple of dollars extra for people who are on the pension and jobseeker – just $1 extra per day to cover very serious increases in costs.

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