AAP Rolling News Bulletin for May 27 at 0830
Mideast (CAIRO)
Israeli strikes have killed at least seven Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, including five in a refugee camp and two in a car, health officials said.
Medics and residents said an Israeli drone fired a missile at people who came out of their homes when an Israeli-backed Palestinian militia tried to storm an area east of Maghazi camp on Tuesday. As well as at least five fatalities, several people were injured.
Asked for comment on the incident around Maghazi camp, the military said troops identified what it described as "armed terrorists" near its armistice line with Hamas, and that they carried out a strike to remove the threat.
Incursions by Israeli-backed armed gangs, whom Hamas brands "Israeli collaborators", have escalated in past weeks.
Iran (TEHRAN)
Iran said the United States has violated a ceasefire after the US conducted what it called defensive strikes in southern Iran, while US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said negotiating a deal to halt the conflict could "take a few days".
Iran's foreign ministry said US strikes in Iran's southern Hormozgan province, where Iranian media reported sounds of explosions early on Tuesday, represented a "gross violation" of a tenuous ceasefire in place for nearly seven weeks.
Both sides had previously indicated progress on a memorandum of understanding that could halt the war and restart shipping through the blockaded Strait of Hormuz, while giving negotiators 60 days to tackle more complex issues including Iran's nuclear program.
Iranian media reported that the country's negotiators had been pushing for the memorandum to include the release of billions of dollars of frozen assets at talks in Qatar.
Economy (CANBERRA)
Inflation pressures are heating up, despite an expected fall in the consumer price index.
Data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Wednesday is likely to show headline inflation cooled in April.
AMP economist My Bui has tipped the annual rate to fall to 4.4 per cent, from 4.6 per cent the month prior.
The slowdown is largely due to the government's decision to temporarily cut the fuel excise in half.
As a result, the Reserve Bank will likely look through the drop in the headline measure and instead focus on trimmed mean inflation, which gives a better sense of the underlying pulse, Ms Bui said.
AMP forecasts the trimmed mean edged up to 3.4 per cent year-on-year.
"We also see a lot more price rises (through) what we would call the secondary round impacts," she told AAP.
Terror Aust (CANBERRA)
A group of women and children linked to the Islamic State terror group has been searched and their devices downloaded by police on arrival at city airports after returning to Australia from years in detention.
The so-called "ISIS brides" travelled from a refugee camp in northern Syria for families of killed or detained Islamic State militants.
The first group of two women and their children touched down in Melbourne shortly after 4.30pm on Tuesday, having flown with Qatar Airways via Doha.
A group of four women and their children arrived at Sydney airport, where they were taken out a back entrance, avoiding waiting media.
Members of the Victoria and NSW Joint Counter Terrorism teams awaited the groups.
"The cohort was subject to a range of operational responses, including the searching of belongings and the downloading of their devices for investigative purposes," NSW and Victoria police said in a statement.
Brereton (CANBERRA)
The first head of Australia's national corruption watchdog rejects suggestions he should have been more transparent about connections with the defence establishment that led to his resignation.
But National Anti-Corruption Commissioner Paul Brereton has conceded the issue had become a distraction.
A day after announcing plans to step down in July after a turbulent three years as commissioner, Mr Brereton said he did not need to give the government more details about his defence ties because it was like asking what church he attends.
During an at times tense appearance before a parliamentary inquiry, Mr Brereton said questions about his ongoing work with the Inspector General of the Australian Defence Force - one of the agencies the National Anti-Corruption Commission had the power to investigate - had made it hard for the commission to get clear air.
Antisemitism (SYDNEY)
A major police operation to protect Jewish community events had been wound down by the time of the Bondi terror attack that claimed 15 innocent lives, an inquiry has heard.
A royal commission is probing the intelligence and law enforcement response leading up to last year's December 14 mass shooting at the famous Sydney beach.
Operation Shelter was established by NSW Police to protect high-risk Jewish events following a sharp rise in anti-Semitic incidents after Hamas' attack on Israel in October 2023.
But a NSW Police superintendent told the commission on Tuesday the operation had been "de-escalated" to the point resources were no longer available at the time of the Bondi attack.
"Not disbanded, it had (been) reduced or de-escalated," she told the commission, speaking under a pseudonym.
White (DARWIN)
A year after a disabled Aboriginal man's death in a supermarket, his family has learned the two plain-clothes officers who forcibly restrained him will not be charged.
Kumanjayi White, 24, died in Alice Springs in May 2025 after the officers held him down, sparking national outrage and rallies calling for an independent investigation.
Northern Territory Police confirmed on Tuesday that the Director of Public Prosecutions had provided advice on the investigation into the death.
Police Commissioner Martin Dole said advice from prosecutors was that there was "no reasonable prospect of a successful prosecution".
He said the decision would cause "distress, pain and anger" for Mr White's family and the broader community and he urged a peaceful response to the decision.
Legal: Freeman (MELBOURNE)
Two men have been arrested as part of the investigation into Dezi Freeman's deadly shooting of two police officers.
Freeman led police on one of the nation's largest manhunts after he killed Senior Constable Vadim de Waart-Hottart and Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson while they were serving a warrant at his home in Victoria's High Country in August 2025.
The 56-year-old fled the scene and evaded capture until he was traced to a remote property at Thologolong near the Victoria-NSW border in March, when he was shot and killed by police.
Task force detectives arrested two men as part of their investigations into the police deaths at Porepunkah, 310km northwest of Melbourne.
The men, aged 48 and 45, were arrested on Tuesday at separate locations in northeast Victoria.
In finance ...
Water (SYDNEY)
Australia's $50 billion water market is booming, drawing global investors and offering farmers flexibility, but ongoing scarcity and record-high permanent plantings are raising the stakes of the next drought.
Australia has one of the few markets in there world where water rights can be separated from land, capped and traded, something that still causes angst in parts of the farming community, National Farmers Federation water committee chair and Finley dairy farmer Malcolm Holm said.
"But in essence, what it's enabled the whole thing to do is actually give farmers and industries flexibility," Mr Holm told AAP.
Selling water rights can take the pressure off farmers' and farming organisations' balance sheets when upgrading equipment, transitioning crops or undertaking succession planning.
However, with water-trading pushing growers towards higher value permanent plantings and government buybacks significantly reducing the volume of water available, the next drought could leave some producers high and dry.
AI Business (SYDNEY)
Australia is well-positioned to take advantage of the global boom in artificial intelligence but governments and regulators need to get the policy settings right so they don't stifle start-ups.
That's the message from two of the country's biggest entrepreneurs in the AI space, including the head of an infrastructure company that operates a network of energy-efficient data centres, which power the technology.
"This is unquestionably the significant industrial transformation in modern history," the head of stock exchange listed NextDC, Craig Scroggie, told a conference in Sydney on Tuesday.
Mr Scroggie echoed comments made earlier in the day by OpenAI founder and chief executive Sam Altman about Australia potentially sitting in a sweet spot in AI development.
Both noted the nation's stable security and political environment, clear regulatory regimes, and natural energy resources, which could underpin its future as a global leader,
In entertainment ...
Andrews (LONDON)
Dame Julie Andrews has made a rare public appearance in a video for the World Parkinson's Congress.
The 90-year-old legend, who became a global star in the film world with her roles in the likes of Mary Poppins and The Sound of Music, appeared in a video message shared on YouTube by the World Parkinson Coalition, as they addressed attendees at the event and commented that she knows "well how devastating" the disease can be.
She said in the clip: "Good evening, everyone, I'm Julie Andrews and I'm pleased to welcome you to the seventh World Parkinson's Congress.
"Your participation is invaluable as we seek to find a cure to this terrible disease. I know well how devastating it can be.
Hathaway (LONDON)
Anne Hathaway was "legally blind" in her left eye for 10 years during a secret health battle.
The Devil Wears Prada 2 star, 43, has confessed she struggled with her sight throughout her 30s and was diagnosed with early-onset cataracts which left her "half blind" for the best part of a decade before she underwent surgery to restore her vision.
During an appearance on The New York Times' Popcast podcast, Hathaway explained: "This is maybe too much information. I was half blind for 10 years.
"It impacted my vision so much that I was basically legally blind out of my left eye and I wound up getting surgery. And I didn't realise how bad it had gotten until I could finally see the full spectrum."
In sport ...
AFL Bombers (MELBOURNE)
James Hird wants to return as Essendon coach, apologising again for his role in their decline and promising he has learned from the debacle that nearly killed him.
Once news of Brad Scott's sacking from the AFL club broke on Tuesday morning, speculation immediately started about whether Hird would return.
President Andrew Welsh said he had not contacted Hird, but added no-one had been ruled in or out to be the senior coach next season.
Hird then confirmed on Tuesday night he was keen to coach the Bombers again.
"The most important thing for me as an Essendon person and what I want to see the football club to do … is for them to go through the most exhaustive process possible for them to find the best person to coach Essendon," he told the Nine Network.
RL Origin (SYDNEY)
Laurie Daley believes Nathan Cleary is unfairly judged for his State of Origin record, claiming NSW's fortunes don't rest solely on the halfback's fortunes.
Cleary will play his 18th Origin game on Wednesday night at Sydney Accor Stadium, with the pressure turning up on the halfback on Tuesday after halves partner Mitchell Moses was ruled out with a hamstring injury.
The 29-year-old will be expected to do the majority of the Blues' kicking alongside rookie Origin five-eighth Ethan Strange, who is not known for having a boom boot, giving Queensland an easy focal point to defend.
Cleary, the Blues most-capped No.7 of all time, has been peerless at NRL level in crunch games over the last six years of Penrith's dominance.
Ends Bulletin
Rolling News Desk inquiries : 02 9322 8611