logo
Online hate group listed as a terrorist organisation

Online hate group listed as a terrorist organisation

Perth Now2 days ago

The online far-right extremist network Terrorgram has been listed as a terrorist organisation, with members facing up to 25 years in jail if convicted of an offence.
The federal government says the group provides instructions on how to conduct a terrorist attack and has been responsible for inspiring terror events in the US, Europe and Asia.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the listing was different to previous ones because of the way Terrorgram operated.
"If people imagine a big chat group dedicated to hatred and violence," he told ABC Radio on Friday.
"It's a situation where the members won't necessarily know each other, they won't necessarily know the people who they're recruiting."
Mr Burke said the group was a direct threat to the safety of Australians and had previously made threats.
The group encouraged not just the sharing of hatred but the sharing of acts of violence and how-to guides to enable people to commit acts of violence, he said.
"You never stop chasing these characters down ... this listing won't be the last thing we have to do against far-right supremacist groups."
Mr Burke said the nature of terrorist threats kept changing, particularly involving young males being radicalised online around the principle of violence.
"These sorts of groups try to tell a whole lot of Australians they're not welcome here," he said.
"They try to tell people they intend for them not be safe.
"We're saying 'no, no, no, it's the hatred and the bigotry and the violence that isn't welcome here'."
Mr Burke said the government was sending the message that serious criminal penalties would be faced by anyone who wanted to engage in Terrorgram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

More money in pockets as financial year changes begin
More money in pockets as financial year changes begin

The Advertiser

time41 minutes ago

  • The Advertiser

More money in pockets as financial year changes begin

Australians will get a boost to minimum wages while more will be squirrelled away into retirement nest eggs under changes taking place at the start of a new financial year. July 1 marks brighter news for the hip pockets of Australians with increases to wages and welfare payments and continued energy bill support. The national minimum wage will increase 3.5 per cent, with the lowest-paid workers taking home $24.95 per hour, or $948 per week. The rate at which superannuation is paid into workers' nest eggs will increase from 11.5 per cent to 12 per cent and expand to working parents who take leave to care for their babies. A mother-of-two's retirement savings will see a boost of about $14,800, with about 200,000 mums benefiting from the change annually. But while most Australians will enjoy more in their super accounts, those with balances over $3 million, about 80,000 people, will have their accounts tax doubled from 15 per cent to 30 per cent. Parents will gain an additional 10 days, totalling 120 days, of parental leave for babies born after July 1. For 2.4 million people on social security payments, the new financial year brings a 2.4 per cent increase to some payments due to indexation. Families on the Family Tax Benefit Part A, will receive $227.36 a fortnight for children aged under 13 and $295.82 for children aged 13 or over. Those on Family Tax Benefit Part B see their payments increase to $193.34, and those with a youngest child aged five or over, the rate will increase to $134.96 a fortnight. While aged pension rates aren't increasing, the threshold for the income and assets a pensioner must earn under to receive a full pension will lift by 2.4 per cent. Four new Medicare items will support longer consultation times and higher rebates for specialised gynaecological care from Tuesday. They apply to initial and follow-up consultations which last a minimum of 45 minutes, either in person or via video, while new menopause and perimenopause health assessments will also be made available. "You simply can't be serious about strengthening Medicare without a serious focus on women's health," Health Minister Mark Butler said. "Women consume about 60 per cent of all health services in this country and they face a range of significant costs simply by virtue of being women." Meanwhile, energy bill support will continue from the government, bringing down pressure on households and small businesses with a $150 rebate automatically applied to bills in two quarterly instalments. But some households could be in for a power bill shock as new benchmark prices take effect, with NSW customers on standing offers facing increases of between 8.3 per cent to 9.7 per cent. Southeast Queensland customers on default plans can expect hikes of between 0.5 per cent and 3.7 per cent, while people in South Australia face rises of 2.3 per cent to 3.2 per cent. Victorian households can expect an average one per cent bump, with some distribution zones actually set for small price drops. Australians will get a boost to minimum wages while more will be squirrelled away into retirement nest eggs under changes taking place at the start of a new financial year. July 1 marks brighter news for the hip pockets of Australians with increases to wages and welfare payments and continued energy bill support. The national minimum wage will increase 3.5 per cent, with the lowest-paid workers taking home $24.95 per hour, or $948 per week. The rate at which superannuation is paid into workers' nest eggs will increase from 11.5 per cent to 12 per cent and expand to working parents who take leave to care for their babies. A mother-of-two's retirement savings will see a boost of about $14,800, with about 200,000 mums benefiting from the change annually. But while most Australians will enjoy more in their super accounts, those with balances over $3 million, about 80,000 people, will have their accounts tax doubled from 15 per cent to 30 per cent. Parents will gain an additional 10 days, totalling 120 days, of parental leave for babies born after July 1. For 2.4 million people on social security payments, the new financial year brings a 2.4 per cent increase to some payments due to indexation. Families on the Family Tax Benefit Part A, will receive $227.36 a fortnight for children aged under 13 and $295.82 for children aged 13 or over. Those on Family Tax Benefit Part B see their payments increase to $193.34, and those with a youngest child aged five or over, the rate will increase to $134.96 a fortnight. While aged pension rates aren't increasing, the threshold for the income and assets a pensioner must earn under to receive a full pension will lift by 2.4 per cent. Four new Medicare items will support longer consultation times and higher rebates for specialised gynaecological care from Tuesday. They apply to initial and follow-up consultations which last a minimum of 45 minutes, either in person or via video, while new menopause and perimenopause health assessments will also be made available. "You simply can't be serious about strengthening Medicare without a serious focus on women's health," Health Minister Mark Butler said. "Women consume about 60 per cent of all health services in this country and they face a range of significant costs simply by virtue of being women." Meanwhile, energy bill support will continue from the government, bringing down pressure on households and small businesses with a $150 rebate automatically applied to bills in two quarterly instalments. But some households could be in for a power bill shock as new benchmark prices take effect, with NSW customers on standing offers facing increases of between 8.3 per cent to 9.7 per cent. Southeast Queensland customers on default plans can expect hikes of between 0.5 per cent and 3.7 per cent, while people in South Australia face rises of 2.3 per cent to 3.2 per cent. Victorian households can expect an average one per cent bump, with some distribution zones actually set for small price drops. Australians will get a boost to minimum wages while more will be squirrelled away into retirement nest eggs under changes taking place at the start of a new financial year. July 1 marks brighter news for the hip pockets of Australians with increases to wages and welfare payments and continued energy bill support. The national minimum wage will increase 3.5 per cent, with the lowest-paid workers taking home $24.95 per hour, or $948 per week. The rate at which superannuation is paid into workers' nest eggs will increase from 11.5 per cent to 12 per cent and expand to working parents who take leave to care for their babies. A mother-of-two's retirement savings will see a boost of about $14,800, with about 200,000 mums benefiting from the change annually. But while most Australians will enjoy more in their super accounts, those with balances over $3 million, about 80,000 people, will have their accounts tax doubled from 15 per cent to 30 per cent. Parents will gain an additional 10 days, totalling 120 days, of parental leave for babies born after July 1. For 2.4 million people on social security payments, the new financial year brings a 2.4 per cent increase to some payments due to indexation. Families on the Family Tax Benefit Part A, will receive $227.36 a fortnight for children aged under 13 and $295.82 for children aged 13 or over. Those on Family Tax Benefit Part B see their payments increase to $193.34, and those with a youngest child aged five or over, the rate will increase to $134.96 a fortnight. While aged pension rates aren't increasing, the threshold for the income and assets a pensioner must earn under to receive a full pension will lift by 2.4 per cent. Four new Medicare items will support longer consultation times and higher rebates for specialised gynaecological care from Tuesday. They apply to initial and follow-up consultations which last a minimum of 45 minutes, either in person or via video, while new menopause and perimenopause health assessments will also be made available. "You simply can't be serious about strengthening Medicare without a serious focus on women's health," Health Minister Mark Butler said. "Women consume about 60 per cent of all health services in this country and they face a range of significant costs simply by virtue of being women." Meanwhile, energy bill support will continue from the government, bringing down pressure on households and small businesses with a $150 rebate automatically applied to bills in two quarterly instalments. But some households could be in for a power bill shock as new benchmark prices take effect, with NSW customers on standing offers facing increases of between 8.3 per cent to 9.7 per cent. Southeast Queensland customers on default plans can expect hikes of between 0.5 per cent and 3.7 per cent, while people in South Australia face rises of 2.3 per cent to 3.2 per cent. Victorian households can expect an average one per cent bump, with some distribution zones actually set for small price drops. Australians will get a boost to minimum wages while more will be squirrelled away into retirement nest eggs under changes taking place at the start of a new financial year. July 1 marks brighter news for the hip pockets of Australians with increases to wages and welfare payments and continued energy bill support. The national minimum wage will increase 3.5 per cent, with the lowest-paid workers taking home $24.95 per hour, or $948 per week. The rate at which superannuation is paid into workers' nest eggs will increase from 11.5 per cent to 12 per cent and expand to working parents who take leave to care for their babies. A mother-of-two's retirement savings will see a boost of about $14,800, with about 200,000 mums benefiting from the change annually. But while most Australians will enjoy more in their super accounts, those with balances over $3 million, about 80,000 people, will have their accounts tax doubled from 15 per cent to 30 per cent. Parents will gain an additional 10 days, totalling 120 days, of parental leave for babies born after July 1. For 2.4 million people on social security payments, the new financial year brings a 2.4 per cent increase to some payments due to indexation. Families on the Family Tax Benefit Part A, will receive $227.36 a fortnight for children aged under 13 and $295.82 for children aged 13 or over. Those on Family Tax Benefit Part B see their payments increase to $193.34, and those with a youngest child aged five or over, the rate will increase to $134.96 a fortnight. While aged pension rates aren't increasing, the threshold for the income and assets a pensioner must earn under to receive a full pension will lift by 2.4 per cent. Four new Medicare items will support longer consultation times and higher rebates for specialised gynaecological care from Tuesday. They apply to initial and follow-up consultations which last a minimum of 45 minutes, either in person or via video, while new menopause and perimenopause health assessments will also be made available. "You simply can't be serious about strengthening Medicare without a serious focus on women's health," Health Minister Mark Butler said. "Women consume about 60 per cent of all health services in this country and they face a range of significant costs simply by virtue of being women." Meanwhile, energy bill support will continue from the government, bringing down pressure on households and small businesses with a $150 rebate automatically applied to bills in two quarterly instalments. But some households could be in for a power bill shock as new benchmark prices take effect, with NSW customers on standing offers facing increases of between 8.3 per cent to 9.7 per cent. Southeast Queensland customers on default plans can expect hikes of between 0.5 per cent and 3.7 per cent, while people in South Australia face rises of 2.3 per cent to 3.2 per cent. Victorian households can expect an average one per cent bump, with some distribution zones actually set for small price drops.

Labor's Veteran Affairs Minister Matt Keogh's 'strategically incoherent' naivety on the Middle East war is cause for concern
Labor's Veteran Affairs Minister Matt Keogh's 'strategically incoherent' naivety on the Middle East war is cause for concern

Sky News AU

time2 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Labor's Veteran Affairs Minister Matt Keogh's 'strategically incoherent' naivety on the Middle East war is cause for concern

Neville Shute's haunting Cold War parable On the Beach imagines Australia as the final, fading refuge from a nuclear apocalypse. 'The world will go on just the same,' says naval officer Peter Holmes, 'only we shan't be in it. I dare say it will get along all right without us.' The line captures a persistent illusion in Australian foreign policy: that we can remain untouched by conflicts beyond our shores. This delusion has become dangerously entrenched, reflected most recently in the Albanese government's hesitant response to war in the Middle East. On Wednesday, Veterans Affairs Minister Matt Keogh provided the standard government response to a question on ABC Perth about potential involvement in the Middle East. "It's not our primary focus area," he replied. "We are very much focused on our region." Yet only two days earlier, a Qantas Boeing 787 from Perth to Paris was forced to turn back more than seven hours into its flight, prevented from reaching its destination by the closure of air space over the Gulf. The geographical reality for an open trading nation like ours is that Australia has had a stake in peace in the Middle East since 1869, when the opening of the Suez Canal reduced the journey to Europe by weeks. Australian troops fought and died in the Middle East in two world wars, not just out of imperial loyalty but because it was in our interests. Our trading links have diversified, and freight handling is more sophisticated. Yet, Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi are the first or last ports of call for nearly 400,000 passengers a month arriving or departing from Australia. Last year, more than 100,000 tonnes of air freight came by that route. As Australians, we should understand better than most that the threat to aircraft flying 30,000 feet over a war zone is not merely theoretical. Malaysian Airlines flight MH 17 Is one of three commercial airliners confirmed to have been brought down by surface-to-air missiles. Among the 298 people who died when the plane came down over eastern Ukraine were 38 Australians. What is unfolding in the Middle East is not an isolated conflict - it is part of a broader confrontation between liberal democracies and revisionist regimes. Iran, through its proxies, joins Russia and China in challenging the rules-based order that underpins global security. Australia's security and prosperity depend on that order. We are a trading nation that relies on open sea lanes, established legal norms, and stable regions. The notion that we can "focus on our region" while ignoring wider threats is strategically incoherent. In short, trade routes, military engagements, and energy security irrevocably bind Australia to the region. Far from being a distant or irrelevant conflict zone, the Middle East is - and always has been - part of Australia's geopolitical backyard. The Middle Eastern diaspora in Australia provides a human link to countries across the region and a profound interest in maintaining their sovereignty. Add to that Australia's historic resistance to nuclear proliferation and naivety of the Albanese government's attempts to distance itself from events in the Middle East becomes screamingly clear. Australia was drawn irreversibly into the geopolitics of the Middle East and, more broadly, the global system that binds the liberal democratic world together. The idea that we can stand aside from today's conflicts - whether in Gaza, the Red Sea, or the broader confrontation between open societies and authoritarian powers - is not just naïve. It is dangerous. Yet there is more to Albanese's foreign policy error than cartographic illiteracy and topographical detachment. The insistence of the intellectual Left to view every conflict through a colonial lens has created uncertainty about which side to support. The framing of Israel as a Western colonising force is no longer a fringe position on the Left. The resale to acknowledge the Jewish people's ancient historical ties to the Middle East and brush aside the significance of international involvement in Israel's creation has become mainstream thinking in Labor. Counter-evidence is dismissed through the selective use of colonial framing. The October 7, 2023, atrocities have not tarnished Hamas' reputation as freedom fighters. Open calls for the destruction of Israel, a genocidal objective incompatible with any liberation narrative, are discounted or justified. The narrative ignores genuine colonial regimes like China in Tibet or Russia in Ukraine, where national cultures are actively suppressed. Nick Cater is a senior fellow at Menzies Research Centre and a regular contributor to Sky News Australia

Social media ban must look to future teen trends
Social media ban must look to future teen trends

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Social media ban must look to future teen trends

The federal government plans to introduce its social media ban for under-16s by December. Announced to mixed reviews last year – parent groups were ecstatic, while mental health organisations have warned about the risk of isolating vulnerable teens and tech commentators questioned the data security trade-offs – the ban would eventually require all Australians to complete an age verification process to use Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and other social media apps. The exact parameters of the ban remain to be seen, and will need to pass parliament, but last week, the Herald reported eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant had advised the government to not restrict its new rules to specific social media platforms. Inman Grant is specifically seeking to include video platform YouTube in the ban, after it previously received an exemption due to its 'significant educational purpose'. According to the eSafety Commission's research, four in 10 young teenagers have been exposed to harmful content, such as eating disorder videos, misogynistic or hateful material, or violent fight videos, while watching YouTube. As the Albanese government finalises the details of its attempt to restrict social media on a national scale, the Sun-Herald believes it is extremely prudent to not include a discrete list of platforms the rules cover. Indeed, as Emily Kowal reports in today's Sun-Herald, there are emerging forms of online engagement driven by artificial intelligence, for which regulation should also be considered. Companion chatbots such as Replika and allow users to converse, call and exchange photos and videos with an AI 'friend'. The user can style this friend as their favourite character from a movie, a celebrity, or someone they know in real life. Loading It is not hard to see why child safety experts are concerned. The eSafety Commissioner said she had received reports of children as young as 10 spending hours on chatbots, which AI researchers say learn from their user, evolving to respond in ways to keep them talking for longer. Some bots are designed to be mean, others tend towards pornographic or other forms of conversation inappropriate for children. All collect information about their user, and few have any real mechanism to validate their user's age.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store