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Minister breaks silence on secret FBI meeting

Minister breaks silence on secret FBI meeting

Perth Now4 days ago
Australia's Home Affairs Minister has been forced to defend a meeting with the FBI director in Sydney.
Donald Trump's FBI director Kash Patel was in Australia and New Zealand in the past week, and a Sunday night dinner meeting between he and Tony Burke was kept secret until Thursday.
The meeting sparked criticism from the Greens, given Mr Patel's broad financial and political support for the people who stormed the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.
'There are simple security reasons why you wait, sometimes, for somebody to be out of the country,' Mr Burke told ABC Radio National on Friday.
'I certainly don't issue a media release every time I talk to one of my counterparts.'
'But can I say the meeting was really good, and the dinner that we had together, with Reece Kershaw, the commissioner of the Australian Federal Police, was a great discussion of the different ways in which we keep people safe.
'I'm really confident about the cooperation with the United States.'
Mr Patel has called the January 6 insurrectionists political prisoners, and his foundation fundraised for the families of the Capitol stormers.
On Friday, Mr Burke said the security relationship with the US was strong. Faced with a choice between keeping Australia safe and 'making political points about what happens in another country', Mr Burke said he always chose the former.
'I'm working with the United States. The safety of Australians, part of it is also in the hands of officials who may hold very different views and priorities.'
'From counter-terrorism all the way to child protection, through to what we do in the interception of drugs coming into Australia, the co-operation keeps Australians safe and there are a number of Australians, a good number who are alive because of that co-operation.'
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Labor vows to fight on as premier makes power move
Labor vows to fight on as premier makes power move

The Advertiser

time39 minutes ago

  • The Advertiser

Labor vows to fight on as premier makes power move

Tasmania's political limbo will come to a head as the premier seeks to have his government recommissioned within days, but the opposition leader isn't going down without a fight. Premier Jeremy Rockliff revealed on Tuesday he would approach the state's governor within 48 hours to be reappointed following a snap election in July that did not deliver any party a clear majority. Negotiations with the cross bench to form another minority government have intensified as Mr Rockliff and Tasmanian Labor Leader Dean Winter attempt to secure the 18 parliamentary votes needed to govern. The premier revealed he would attempt to stay in power even if he could not secure confidence and supply agreements from crossbenchers. "I would welcome more formal agreements with confidence and supply should individual members wish to do so," Mr Rockliff told reporters on Tuesday. "My understanding is that it is not necessary in terms of being recommissioned in a minority government." Mr Winter said while Mr Rockliff had the first opportunity to form government, it was not the only opportunity. He vowed to step up meetings with crossbenchers because a government without supply and confidence agreements would lead to instability, highlighting intentions for formal talks with independents in coming days. Mr Winter continued to rule out doing a deal with the Greens and said he wasn't seeking to meet with them. "We want to work with independents in particular who have said they want change," he said. "They want a new government, they want a government that can deliver stability and confidence to Tasmanians." The final makeup of Tasmania's parliament is 14 Liberals, 10 Labor, five Greens, one Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP and five independents. Many crossbenchers are remaining tight-lipped on who they would support including Shooters, Fishers, Farmers MP Carlo Di Falco, who has placed gun law changes on the political agenda. He nominated "gun laws fit for purpose" among his priorities in parliament but insisted the issue hadn't come up in negotiations with Mr Rockliff or Mr Winter, suggesting his party's name made it obvious that was a core policy. Mr Di Falco believes the federal Howard government acted too quickly on gun control after the 1996 Port Arthur massacre. "There are anti-firearm zealots out there and I think it's morally reprehensible that 30 years after a tragedy that you know, that traumatised everybody, that they're still trying to milk that tragedy for all it's worth," he told AAP. "My view is just let ... the victims of Port Arthur rest in peace and it's not serving anybody's purposes to just keep regurgitating the same fearmongering that was happening in 1996." His comments drew criticism from Stephen Bendle from the Alannah & Madeline Foundation, an anti-violence charity set up by Walter Mikac after his two daughters were killed in the shooting. Mr Bendle, the charity's advocacy advisor, accused Mr Di Falco of being disrespectful and said the majority of Australians felt the nation's gun laws were "about right" or could be tighter. "It is hard to speak to anyone in Tasmania, let alone the rest of Australia that hasn't felt the impact of that tragedy," he said. "The fact that our strong gun laws have been largely responsible for the fact that it hasn't been repeated might be uncomfortable for Mr Di Falco and his supporters." Elected members have been confirmed after Labor's Jess Greene and independent George Razay claimed the final seats in the division of Bass on Saturday. The July 19 election was triggered after Mr Rockliff lost a no-confidence motion, prompting the state's second election in 16 months. A key sticking point in negotiations to form government is the major parties backing a new $1 billion stadium in Hobart, which the Greens and some independents oppose. Tasmania's political limbo will come to a head as the premier seeks to have his government recommissioned within days, but the opposition leader isn't going down without a fight. Premier Jeremy Rockliff revealed on Tuesday he would approach the state's governor within 48 hours to be reappointed following a snap election in July that did not deliver any party a clear majority. Negotiations with the cross bench to form another minority government have intensified as Mr Rockliff and Tasmanian Labor Leader Dean Winter attempt to secure the 18 parliamentary votes needed to govern. The premier revealed he would attempt to stay in power even if he could not secure confidence and supply agreements from crossbenchers. "I would welcome more formal agreements with confidence and supply should individual members wish to do so," Mr Rockliff told reporters on Tuesday. "My understanding is that it is not necessary in terms of being recommissioned in a minority government." Mr Winter said while Mr Rockliff had the first opportunity to form government, it was not the only opportunity. He vowed to step up meetings with crossbenchers because a government without supply and confidence agreements would lead to instability, highlighting intentions for formal talks with independents in coming days. Mr Winter continued to rule out doing a deal with the Greens and said he wasn't seeking to meet with them. "We want to work with independents in particular who have said they want change," he said. "They want a new government, they want a government that can deliver stability and confidence to Tasmanians." The final makeup of Tasmania's parliament is 14 Liberals, 10 Labor, five Greens, one Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP and five independents. Many crossbenchers are remaining tight-lipped on who they would support including Shooters, Fishers, Farmers MP Carlo Di Falco, who has placed gun law changes on the political agenda. He nominated "gun laws fit for purpose" among his priorities in parliament but insisted the issue hadn't come up in negotiations with Mr Rockliff or Mr Winter, suggesting his party's name made it obvious that was a core policy. Mr Di Falco believes the federal Howard government acted too quickly on gun control after the 1996 Port Arthur massacre. "There are anti-firearm zealots out there and I think it's morally reprehensible that 30 years after a tragedy that you know, that traumatised everybody, that they're still trying to milk that tragedy for all it's worth," he told AAP. "My view is just let ... the victims of Port Arthur rest in peace and it's not serving anybody's purposes to just keep regurgitating the same fearmongering that was happening in 1996." His comments drew criticism from Stephen Bendle from the Alannah & Madeline Foundation, an anti-violence charity set up by Walter Mikac after his two daughters were killed in the shooting. Mr Bendle, the charity's advocacy advisor, accused Mr Di Falco of being disrespectful and said the majority of Australians felt the nation's gun laws were "about right" or could be tighter. "It is hard to speak to anyone in Tasmania, let alone the rest of Australia that hasn't felt the impact of that tragedy," he said. "The fact that our strong gun laws have been largely responsible for the fact that it hasn't been repeated might be uncomfortable for Mr Di Falco and his supporters." Elected members have been confirmed after Labor's Jess Greene and independent George Razay claimed the final seats in the division of Bass on Saturday. The July 19 election was triggered after Mr Rockliff lost a no-confidence motion, prompting the state's second election in 16 months. A key sticking point in negotiations to form government is the major parties backing a new $1 billion stadium in Hobart, which the Greens and some independents oppose. Tasmania's political limbo will come to a head as the premier seeks to have his government recommissioned within days, but the opposition leader isn't going down without a fight. Premier Jeremy Rockliff revealed on Tuesday he would approach the state's governor within 48 hours to be reappointed following a snap election in July that did not deliver any party a clear majority. Negotiations with the cross bench to form another minority government have intensified as Mr Rockliff and Tasmanian Labor Leader Dean Winter attempt to secure the 18 parliamentary votes needed to govern. The premier revealed he would attempt to stay in power even if he could not secure confidence and supply agreements from crossbenchers. "I would welcome more formal agreements with confidence and supply should individual members wish to do so," Mr Rockliff told reporters on Tuesday. "My understanding is that it is not necessary in terms of being recommissioned in a minority government." Mr Winter said while Mr Rockliff had the first opportunity to form government, it was not the only opportunity. He vowed to step up meetings with crossbenchers because a government without supply and confidence agreements would lead to instability, highlighting intentions for formal talks with independents in coming days. Mr Winter continued to rule out doing a deal with the Greens and said he wasn't seeking to meet with them. "We want to work with independents in particular who have said they want change," he said. "They want a new government, they want a government that can deliver stability and confidence to Tasmanians." The final makeup of Tasmania's parliament is 14 Liberals, 10 Labor, five Greens, one Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP and five independents. Many crossbenchers are remaining tight-lipped on who they would support including Shooters, Fishers, Farmers MP Carlo Di Falco, who has placed gun law changes on the political agenda. He nominated "gun laws fit for purpose" among his priorities in parliament but insisted the issue hadn't come up in negotiations with Mr Rockliff or Mr Winter, suggesting his party's name made it obvious that was a core policy. Mr Di Falco believes the federal Howard government acted too quickly on gun control after the 1996 Port Arthur massacre. "There are anti-firearm zealots out there and I think it's morally reprehensible that 30 years after a tragedy that you know, that traumatised everybody, that they're still trying to milk that tragedy for all it's worth," he told AAP. "My view is just let ... the victims of Port Arthur rest in peace and it's not serving anybody's purposes to just keep regurgitating the same fearmongering that was happening in 1996." His comments drew criticism from Stephen Bendle from the Alannah & Madeline Foundation, an anti-violence charity set up by Walter Mikac after his two daughters were killed in the shooting. Mr Bendle, the charity's advocacy advisor, accused Mr Di Falco of being disrespectful and said the majority of Australians felt the nation's gun laws were "about right" or could be tighter. "It is hard to speak to anyone in Tasmania, let alone the rest of Australia that hasn't felt the impact of that tragedy," he said. "The fact that our strong gun laws have been largely responsible for the fact that it hasn't been repeated might be uncomfortable for Mr Di Falco and his supporters." Elected members have been confirmed after Labor's Jess Greene and independent George Razay claimed the final seats in the division of Bass on Saturday. The July 19 election was triggered after Mr Rockliff lost a no-confidence motion, prompting the state's second election in 16 months. A key sticking point in negotiations to form government is the major parties backing a new $1 billion stadium in Hobart, which the Greens and some independents oppose. Tasmania's political limbo will come to a head as the premier seeks to have his government recommissioned within days, but the opposition leader isn't going down without a fight. Premier Jeremy Rockliff revealed on Tuesday he would approach the state's governor within 48 hours to be reappointed following a snap election in July that did not deliver any party a clear majority. Negotiations with the cross bench to form another minority government have intensified as Mr Rockliff and Tasmanian Labor Leader Dean Winter attempt to secure the 18 parliamentary votes needed to govern. The premier revealed he would attempt to stay in power even if he could not secure confidence and supply agreements from crossbenchers. "I would welcome more formal agreements with confidence and supply should individual members wish to do so," Mr Rockliff told reporters on Tuesday. "My understanding is that it is not necessary in terms of being recommissioned in a minority government." Mr Winter said while Mr Rockliff had the first opportunity to form government, it was not the only opportunity. He vowed to step up meetings with crossbenchers because a government without supply and confidence agreements would lead to instability, highlighting intentions for formal talks with independents in coming days. Mr Winter continued to rule out doing a deal with the Greens and said he wasn't seeking to meet with them. "We want to work with independents in particular who have said they want change," he said. "They want a new government, they want a government that can deliver stability and confidence to Tasmanians." The final makeup of Tasmania's parliament is 14 Liberals, 10 Labor, five Greens, one Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP and five independents. Many crossbenchers are remaining tight-lipped on who they would support including Shooters, Fishers, Farmers MP Carlo Di Falco, who has placed gun law changes on the political agenda. He nominated "gun laws fit for purpose" among his priorities in parliament but insisted the issue hadn't come up in negotiations with Mr Rockliff or Mr Winter, suggesting his party's name made it obvious that was a core policy. Mr Di Falco believes the federal Howard government acted too quickly on gun control after the 1996 Port Arthur massacre. "There are anti-firearm zealots out there and I think it's morally reprehensible that 30 years after a tragedy that you know, that traumatised everybody, that they're still trying to milk that tragedy for all it's worth," he told AAP. "My view is just let ... the victims of Port Arthur rest in peace and it's not serving anybody's purposes to just keep regurgitating the same fearmongering that was happening in 1996." His comments drew criticism from Stephen Bendle from the Alannah & Madeline Foundation, an anti-violence charity set up by Walter Mikac after his two daughters were killed in the shooting. Mr Bendle, the charity's advocacy advisor, accused Mr Di Falco of being disrespectful and said the majority of Australians felt the nation's gun laws were "about right" or could be tighter. "It is hard to speak to anyone in Tasmania, let alone the rest of Australia that hasn't felt the impact of that tragedy," he said. "The fact that our strong gun laws have been largely responsible for the fact that it hasn't been repeated might be uncomfortable for Mr Di Falco and his supporters." Elected members have been confirmed after Labor's Jess Greene and independent George Razay claimed the final seats in the division of Bass on Saturday. The July 19 election was triggered after Mr Rockliff lost a no-confidence motion, prompting the state's second election in 16 months. A key sticking point in negotiations to form government is the major parties backing a new $1 billion stadium in Hobart, which the Greens and some independents oppose.

Kmart sued by Australian Uyghur Tangritagh Women's Association over alleged links to forced labour from China's Xinjiang region
Kmart sued by Australian Uyghur Tangritagh Women's Association over alleged links to forced labour from China's Xinjiang region

Sky News AU

time3 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Kmart sued by Australian Uyghur Tangritagh Women's Association over alleged links to forced labour from China's Xinjiang region

Kmart is being sued in Federal Court to determine whether the retailer misled customers about its ethics claims and sourced some of its clothes from suppliers that allegedly used slave labour. Class-action law-firm Maurice Blackburn has filed a suit on behalf of the Australian Uyghur Tangritagh Women's Association (AUTWA) against Kmart. The association wants the retailer to release documents that show what it knows about two suppliers with alleged links to factories in China's Xinjiang region. Kmart has rejected these claims. Human rights abuses in the area were the subject of a landmark report in 2022 where the United Nations recommended Beijing investigated allegations of human rights violations, 'including allegations of torture, sexual violence, ill-treatment, forced medical treatment, as well as forced labour and reports of deaths in custody'. It also called for the Chinese government to take 'prompt steps' to release all individuals arbitrarily imprisoned. The AUTWA is seeking the documents to determine whether Kmart has abided by its ethical sourcing procedures and if it misled consumers. Ramila Chanisheff, president of the AUTWA, said the association was 'demanding answers from Kmart' to determine whether the retailer's actions 'live up to its words'. 'Kmart, and all companies, must ensure they are not profiting from forced labour in China,' Ms Chanisheff said in a statement. 'China's mass imprisonment, repression and forced labour of Uyghur people is well-documented. 'Our community has lost family members, friends and loved ones because of China's brutal treatment of Uyghurs. 'Kmart is a go-to store for so many people in Australia. If the company has profited in any way from this sort of systematic repression, I am sure Australians would be horrified.' A Kmart spokesperson said the retailer was 'disappointed' by the court action and had invited AUTWA to meet and discuss the concerns on several occasions. 'Kmart has been in correspondence with the applicant's lawyers for over 12 months and has provided extensive details of our Ethical Sourcing Program,' the spokesperson said. The spokesperson noted Kmart has had its 'ethical sourcing program' in place for 15 years which helps the company identify and mitigate modern slavery risks across its supply chains. They noted the program takes from Kmart's 'ethical sourcing code' which adopts the standards under the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Labour Organisation. 'Compliance with our Ethical Sourcing Code is required under our contracts with our Suppliers,' the spokesperson said. 'Suppliers in the Kmart Ethical Sourcing Program are regularly monitored through activities including our site visits, audit programs and investigations if we receive any reports or complaints of concern.' AUTWA is also represented by the Human Rights Law Centre (HRLC) alongside Maurice Blackburn. HRLC's associate legal director Freya Dinshaw said 'alarm bells' had been 'ringing for a long time' about the risk of forced labour being used in the Chinese garment sector. 'This court case is about Kmart coming clean on whether it is really doing everything it claims to be doing to ensure that its products are slavery-free,' Ms Dinshaw said in a statement. She stressed the case was also an opportunity to highlight 'weaknesses' in Australia's modern slavery laws. 'It shouldn't be left to members of the public to take companies to court and force them to open their books where there are suspicions of links to modern slavery,' Ms Dinshaw said. 'Australian companies should be legally required to investigate and prevent forced labour in their supply chains and face hard consequences if they don't. 'Australia should also follow the example of other countries like Canada and the US and ban imported goods made with forced labour, so they don't end up on our shop shelves.' China rejected the claims in the UN's 2022 report. In August 2024, the UN said it has faced 'difficulties posed by limited access to information' with its investigations into the human rights abuses. It also noted many who spoke about the abuses with the UN had 'fear of reprisals'.

‘Messy and chilling': Communications Minister Anika Wells' stunning admission about plan to ban kids from social media
‘Messy and chilling': Communications Minister Anika Wells' stunning admission about plan to ban kids from social media

Sky News AU

time3 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

‘Messy and chilling': Communications Minister Anika Wells' stunning admission about plan to ban kids from social media

Communications Minister Anika Wells has conceded the rollout of her controversial under-16 social media ban will be 'messy', as she pushes for child accounts to be axed on 'day one'. In an exclusive interview with Sky News Political Editor Andrew Clennell, Minister Wells said the laws, which come into effect on December 10, would have a 'chilling effect' which will change the 'culture of social media account usage in our kids'. 'Under the law, the onus is on the platforms to make sure that they have identified any social media accounts that are held by under 16s and that on day one those social media accounts are deactivated,' Ms Wells said. 'They've also got to take reasonable steps to make sure that no new accounts are activated, that anyone trying to get around the system, they've taken reasonable steps to try and stop that from happening and to clean up areas as we go. 'Anything that's world leading, anything that we're trying to do, we're trying a big swing. It's going to look a bit messy on the way through.' When pressed on how tech companies would verify the age of users, Minister Wells did not specify exactly how the government expected the ban to be enforced. Minister Wells instead said there was a 'very good chance' tech companies knew 'how old you are' given how sophisticated their content algorithms were. 'They can target us with deadly accuracy when it comes to their advertising and when it comes to promoting their advertising for revenue streams,' she said. 'So if they know where you are, what you're doing, whom you do it with, at what time you do, there's a very good chance that they know how old you are.' An 'Age Assurance' technology trial is underway, but its final recommendations have yet to be handed down. The preliminary report found there were 'no significant technological barriers' preventing an age check. But the government has not yet indicated exactly what technology would be used to verify Australians' identities. Minister Wells said she would publish the final report when it's handed down, and said she would work with the eSafety Commissioner on 'how this rolls out'. 'But whilst we wait for the final recommendation, I'll just say that it looks promising,' she said. 'There will be an onus on social media platforms to take reasonable steps and to work with the Youth Safety Commissioner.' Last week, the Albanese government confirmed YouTube would be included in the under-16 social media ban after previously promising the platform would be given an exemption. The opposition accused Labor of misleading Australians before the election. 'The Albanese Labor Government can change a Minister, but they cannot hide the fact they deliberately misled the public at the last election by promising to keep YouTube out of the social media age minimum,' shadow communications minister Melissa McIntosh said last week. 'The Prime Minister and the Labor government reaffirmed YouTube's exemption before the election. They gave YouTube an iron-clad guarantee they would remain exempt. It makes you question what has really changed behind the scenes in the government on this issue, and whether it was an election stunt.' Social media companies will be given hefty penalties for non-compliance, with fines up to $49.5 million for companies that are found to be systemically breaching the rules.

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