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AAP Rolling News Bulletin June 19, 1130

AAP Rolling News Bulletin for June 19 at 1130

UK Vote (LONDON)

Polls have closed in Makerfield, where voters have taken part in what could be one of the most consequential by-elections in British political history.

Andy Burnham, who is standing as Labour's candidate in the Greater Manchester constituency with the hope of returning to parliament to replace Sir Keir Starmer as prime minister, urged people to "vote to change politics".

Sir Keir on Wednesday said he was willing to offer the Mayor of Greater Manchester a "big" job in his government, should his rival win when Thursday's votes are counted.

But allies of the mayor said he was not interested, insisting "the benefit Andy has is the wind of change for not having been associated with the government's failings".

The prime minister has repeatedly insisted he has no intention of standing aside and is understood to have amassed a war chest to fund his campaign to fight any leadership challenge, as first reported by The Times.

Sudan (GENEVA)

The ‌United Kingdom, Norway and a group ‌of countries including Australia have raised ‌the alarm at the United Nations Human Rights Council that the paramilitary Rapid Support ‌Forces ‌in ⁠Sudan could imminently escalate their ​assault on the central Sudanese city of al-Obeid, possibly resulting in large-scale atrocities.

"We ‌are deeply concerned at the risk of imminent escalation on the ground, leaving approximately 500,000 civilians at risk of falling victim to large-scale atrocities, including more than 100,000 internally displaced persons," Tormod Endresen, the ambassador for Norway, told the council in Geneva.

Norway shared a joint statement calling on the RSF to immediately cease its assault on al-Obeid.

The statement was presented on behalf of the Coalition for Atrocity Prevention and Justice for Sudan, comprising the UK, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, Sierra Leone and ‌Norway, which said ‌they were also joined by ⁠21 other countries.

Ukraine (KAZAN)

Russia ‌will ‌carry out "massive co-ordinated strikes ‌on ‌a ⁠regular basis" ​against Ukraine, Foreign Minister ⁠Sergei Lavrov ‌says after ‌a major Ukrainian ​drone attack ​on ​Moscow.

Ukrainian forces struck a major Moscow oil refinery on Thursday for a second time in a week, sending huge plumes of black smoke over the capital and disrupting hundreds of flights at its airports in one of its biggest drone attacks, officials said.

The Ukrainian attacks left 17 people injured and damaged civilian infrastructure in the capital, local officials said.

The attack by dozens of drones came hours after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said he had held "an important co-ordination call" with the presidents of the United States and France and had won key pledges of further support from this week's G7 summit.

Iran (WASHINGTON, D. C.)

US Vice ‌President JD Vance says a 60-day window laid ‌out in a memorandum of understanding approved by President ‌Donald Trump and Iranian leaders has begun.

"I would say the 60-day period officially started today," Vance told reporters at a White House ‌briefing on Thursday.

Asked what ‌happens ⁠after the 60-day period in ​terms of governance of the Strait of Hormuz, Vance repeated the US view that the major supply route for oil and gas shipments should be free ⁠of tolls.

Iran largely ​closed the waterway during the war.

"The final negotiations ​can set ‌the terms of what comes afterwards," Vance said.

During the 60 days, negotiators are expected to tackle some of the most contentious and unresolved issues that were left open in the initial accord.

Tax (CANBERRA)

Despite handing startups more concessions from capital gains tax hikes in the federal budget, the government has been warned that the changes will exacerbate a brain drain of top talent from Australia.

New carve-outs will allow "innovative businesses" to continue to access the existing 50 per cent capital gains tax discount, while eligibility for the existing 50 per cent active asset reduction for small businesses will be expanded.

Labor's May budget replaced the 50 per cent discount with an inflation indexation model and a minimum 30 per cent tax rate.

While sold as making the housing market fairer for first home buyers at the expense of property investors, the changes were extended to all assets, including shares and businesses.

Because startups often have a negligible initial cost base to index from, the proposed changes would double the maximum effective tax rate on capital gains to nearly 47 per cent, diminishing the incentive to take a risk and start a business.

NDIS (CANBERRA)

The delay of a major report into plans to overhaul the $56 billion National Disability Insurance Scheme has been labelled "disrespectful," as disability advocates plead for participants to be protected from harm.

A parliamentary inquiry into Labor's proposed changes will hand down its report on Friday afternoon, after a last-minute decision earlier this week to delay its release.

The Albanese government is trying to claw back billions in savings to stop the NDIS from continuing to grow at an "unsustainable" pace, under changes that will kick 160,000 people off the scheme.

Public hearings have been told by disability groups the reform would lead to people dying, while increasing complexity for support providers.

People with Disability Australia interim president Jarrod Sandell-Hay, also an NDIS participant, said he hoped the report acknowledged concerns aired during the inquiry.

KPMG (SYDNEY)

The leaders of a high-profile consultancy face a grilling from a powerful federal oversight committee after making an 11th-hour decision to withhold information from their interrogators.

KPMG, which has more than half a billion dollars in taxpayer-funded government contracts, is feeling the heat over an audit leak scandal and the treatment of a whistleblower, raising concerns about its governance and integrity frameworks.

Ahead of Friday's hearing, it told the committee it would not provide the requested documents linked to those matters because they were confidential, subject to professional privilege and could prejudice the "administration of justice".

"We appreciate that this is not the response the committee was seeking," chairman Martin Sheppard wrote in a letter tabled by Labor's Deborah O'Neill, the committee chair.

Iran (BEIRUT)

Three Saudi-flagged supertankers carrying six million barrels of crude have sailed through the Strait of Hormuz, hours after US ‌President Donald Trump signed a deal with Iran to end the war that has disrupted global energy supplies.

But in Lebanon, where more than a million people are displaced by the fighting, Israeli forces launched fresh air strikes on Thursday ‌morning, raising doubt about how far Trump will go to force his wartime allies to halt an offensive he has now pledged to end.

Trump put his signature on Wednesday on the "memorandum of understanding" to end the war, as did ‌Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian, bringing it into effect two days earlier than previously expected.

It calls for the immediate opening of the Strait of Hormuz and lifting of a US blockade of Iran's ports.

In finance ...

Tax (CANBERRA)

Long-promised capital gains carve-outs for startups have been revealed and tax changes rolled back for some trusts as Labor tries to ease the blowback from its contentious budget.

The concessions, unveiled on Thursday, will keep the existing 50 per cent capital gains tax discount for "innovative businesses" following a fiery campaign by startups and entrepreneurs that has taken the shine off Treasurer Jim Chalmers's reforms.

On top of the carve-out, one of four existing small business capital gains concessions - the 50 per cent active asset reduction - will be extended to businesses with a turnover up to $10 million a year from the existing threshold of $2 million.

About 2.7 million, or 98 per cent, of all existing small businesses, would be eligible as a result of the change, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said.

Japan Yen (TOKYO)

The yen is trading precariously near the weakest level in nearly ‌four decades, putting investors on guard for potential intervention from Japan ‌to defend its currency.

With the Juneteenth trading break looming in the United States, ‌thin liquidity conditions could open the door for Japan to step into markets again, as it did during its own holidays in late April and early May, when it intervened to the tune of ‌11.7 trillion yen ($A103.35 billion).

The ‌yen ⁠changed hands at 161.25 per dollar in early trading ​on Friday in Tokyo after hitting 161.81 overnight, its weakest since July 2024, wiping out all gains from the previous intervention bout following a hawkish tilt by the US Federal Reserve. A break above the currency pair's 2024 ⁠high of 161.96 would send the ‌yen ​to its weakest level since 1986.

In entertainment ...

Legal: Carpenter (LONDON)

Sabrina Carpenter has been granted a permanent restraining order against a man who was arrested at her Los Angeles home but continued to return.

The Please Please hitmaker had sought protection from William Applegate, who was apprehended by police on her property, and again the following day.

Now a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge has ordered the 31-year-old to stay 100m away from Carpenter, her sister Sarah, and Sarah's boyfriend George for the next five years.

Applegate testified at the hearing to oppose the request for the restraining order, but failed to persuade the judge, TMZ reports.

The 27-year-old singer was granted a temporary restraining order at the start of this month after her team filed for protection on May 19.

TaylorJoy (LONDON)

Anya Taylor-Joy was bullied at school over her looks.

Despite later becoming one of Hollywood's most sought-after stars and a favourite of the fashion world, the 30-year-old actress says she was repeatedly told by fellow pupils she was not beautiful after moving to Britain as a child.

Florida-born Taylor-Joy opened up about her early experiences in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, reflecting on the challenges she faced after relocating from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to London aged six.

Taylor-Joy said she found herself ostracised almost immediately after starting school in London.

The Hollywood Reporter reported that after kissing a classmate on the cheek, she was alienated by fellow pupils and repeatedly told she was not beautiful.

Taylor-Joy made the comments while posing for a fashion shoot accompanying the interview, wearing designs by Ludovic de Saint Sernin, Rabanne, Datt Official and Lanvin.

In sport ...

RU Aust (SYDNEY)

Veteran prop James Slipper and uncapped trio Declan Meredith, Lachlan Shaw and Miles Amatosero have all been included in the Wallabies squad for next month's Nations Championship Tests in Australia.

After retiring last November, 37-year-old Slipper could surpass All Blacks great Sam Whitelock as rugby's second most-capped player in history after answering an SOS call from coach Joe Schmidt.

Fellow loosehead Angus Bell also features in the 37-man squad following a season-long sabbatical with Ulster in Ireland.

Looking to press their 2027 World Cup claims, Brumbies pair Meredith and Shaw and Waratahs lock Amatosero are in line for potential debuts against Ireland in Sydney on July 4.

Meredith, 29, grew up in Cairns and played his junior rugby for Barron Trinity Bulls before moving to Canberra and earning his selection following strong performances at flyhalf for the Brumbies.

Gol Open (SYDNEY)

Adam Scott has risen to the occasion to be the leading Australian as Shinnecock Hllls bared its teeth early in the weather-hit US Open outside New York.

A two-hour fog delay kept the field waiting on Thursday before Scott ground out a first-round three-over-par 73 playing his milestone 100th consecutive major championship.

American Sam Stevens snared the clubhouse lead with a two-under 68 as once again the world's best players battled hard to deal with one of the sternest tests in golf.

Two birdies in his first three holes helped world No.2 Rory McIlroy take the early lead before the back-to-back Masters champion signed for a 69 to sit ominously one shot off the pace after the morning wave.

Starting at the 10th, McIlroy holed a 10-foot putt at the short but perilous 11th and then followed that up, holing from more than twice that distance at the long 12th.

Ends Bulletin

Rolling News Desk inquiries : 02 9322 8611

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