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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Antoun Issa

Afternoon Update: far north braces for Jasper; US ‘concerned’ by reports of Israeli use of white phosphorus; and love life after dating apps

A forecast map shows tropical cyclone Jasper's predicted path towards the coast of far north Queensland. 12th December 2023. Australia
A forecast map shows Tropical Cyclone Jasper's predicted path towards the coast of far north Queensland. Photograph: weatherzone.com.au

Good afternoon. Steven Miles will become Queensland’s new premier, after his challenger withdrew from the race.

But as the storm in Queensland Labor ranks eases, another is approaching far north Queensland. Communities in and around Cairns, Townsville and Port Douglas have been told to prepare for up to five days without power, amid warnings that Tropical Cyclone Jasper could dump 500mm of rain in 24 hours.

The cyclone is forecast to re-intensify before making landfall near Port Douglas as a category 2 tomorrow afternoon.

Top news

Bruce Lehrmann is seen walking with lawyers during a break at the Federal Court of Australia in Sydney
Bruce Lehrmann (right) is seen during a break at the federal court of Australia in Sydney. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP
  • Bruce Lehrmann seeks ‘secret’ Sky News recordings | So-called “secret” recordings of Brittany Higgins’ lawyer, Leon Zwier, speaking to her fiance, David Sharaz, at a Sydney bar while she faced cross-examination are being sought by Lehrmann’s legal team as he sues for defamation. While under cross-examination, a witness is specifically told not to discuss the case with anyone else. Zwier has denied coaching his client through her fiance.

  • US ‘concerned’ by reports Israel military using white phosphorus | The White House said it would raise a new report with the Israeli government alleging it used US-supplied white phosphorus in a bombing attack in Lebanon that injured civilians and burned down houses. It comes as violence escalates on the Israeli-Lebanese border, with a mayor in south Lebanon reportedly killed by an Israeli airstrike. Meanwhile, diplomats say negotiations for a new ceasefire in Gaza are unlikely to resume for weeks, with an understanding the Biden administration is not going to apply any more pressure on Israel to end its campaign.

Left: One Nation leader Pauline Hanson. Right: Australian Greens Senator Mehreen Faruqi delivers her maiden speech in the Senate chamber
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson (left) and Greens Senator Mehreen Faruqi. Composite: AAP
  • Mehreen Faruqi v Pauline Hanson | The Greens senator has launched a crowdfunding campaign to help finance a racial vilification case she has brought against Pauline Hanson, saying “race hate in Australia is only getting worse”. Faruqi launched legal action against Hanson in the federal court in May after the One Nation leader told the Greens senator to “pack [her] bags and piss off back to Pakistan” in a tweet. Hanson will argue freedom of political speech.

  • Queensland children in adult watch houses being denied bail | Children are being denied bail – and held in adult police watch houses – because they come from dysfunctional families or don’t have safe accommodation, a report by the Queensland Family and Child Commission has found. The review says there is a “particularly significant level of over‐representation” of First Nations children affected by the state’s policy of keeping children in adult holding cells.

Map of Melbourne’s proposed Suburban Rail Loop
A map of Melbourne’s proposed Suburban Rail Loop. Photograph: Australian Government
  • Victoria announces first large Suburban Rail Loop contract | The premier, Jacinta Allan, announced a $3.6bn contract for the first stage of tunnels to be built between Cheltenham and Glen Waverley. The announcement comes a week after an integrity agency found the controversial project was developed under “excessive secrecy” and “proved up” by consultants.

  • ABC drops The Drum | The ABC’s primetime panel show has been axed after more than a decade on air due to dwindling ratings. The show will end after this week, with the program’s three main hosts, Julia Baird, Ellen Fanning and Dan Bourchier, all staying on in various roles. The ABC said “fewer than five” positions would be made redundant.

Australia’s prime minister Anthony Albanese meets China’s President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China
Australia’s prime minister Anthony Albanese meets China’s president Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
  • China drops trade sanctions on Australian beef | China has lifted suspensions off three Australian abattoirs in a further easing of punitive trade sanctions imposed on the nation’s exports. The trade minister, Don Farrell, said this was another “positive step” towards the stabilisation of the relationship with China.

  • Google loses antitrust trial to Fortnite maker Epic Games | Epic’s lawsuit accused Google of taking action to quash competitors and charging unduly high fees of up to 30% to app developers on its Google Play app. Jurors found for Epic on all counts. Google said it would appeal.

In pictures

Cartoon of a giant washing machine, with the words “THE UNBELIEVABLE GREENWASHING MACHINE” and “as used by both business and government” written above and on it. A sign with the words “COP28 TRADE FAIR” hangs above the machine and a speech bubble above a man talking to government figures says, “It doesn’t actually make anything cleaner but it does do a whole lot of spinning”
‘It doesn’t actually make anything cleaner but it does do a whole lot of spinning.’ Illustration: Fiona Katauskas/The Guardian

Are the Cop summits just a greenwashing exercise? Cartoon by Fiona Katauskas.

What they said …

Minister for Industry Ed Husic
Minister for industry Ed Husic. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

***

“One of the hardest things to learn about was [Palestinian] parents writing the names of their children on the soles of their feet because they figured that the next morning, that they may not be there, and they need to be identified.”

The federal Labor frontbencher Ed Husic made the remarks today on ABC’s Radio National.

In numbers

A slide that says “34% of Australians say they trust the federal parliament – down from 55% in August 2020”

Anthony Albanese’s government is at a nadir, voters are furious and our politicians have never seemed more impotent, writes Peter Lewis.

Before bed read

Nicholas Jordan holding six ice-creams – (from left) Magnum Classic, Pana Organic Hazelnut, Denada Vanilla + Almond Choc Pop, and two Bulla Vanilla Creamy Classics
Nicholas Jordan on a tough assignment. Photograph: Isabella Moore

The results from a supermarket ice-cream stick taste test are in: the winner is a classic, and the worst is the most expensive.

Read the story.

Reader callout – dating apps

Tell us: what happened to your love life after you quit dating apps? How did it affect your mood and self-esteem? How do you meet people now? Tips for making IRL connections and the times fate delivered are welcome too.

Fill out this form.

Daily word game

Wordiply game

Today’s starter word is: KEY. You have five goes to get the longest word including the starter word. Play Wordiply.

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