Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Martin Farrer

Morning Mail: ‘in danger’ report for Great Barrier Reef, trains take plane fare strain, rental stress soars

The Great Barrier Reef from the air
Australia must commit to reducing greenhouse emissions to protect the reef, experts say in a report recommending it be placed on the world heritage ‘in danger’ list. Photograph: Jumbo Aerial Photography/AP

Morning, everyone. First it was delayed by the Coalition’s climate wars, then the actual war in Ukraine. But a UN-backed mission has finally declared that the Great Barrier Reef should be placed on a list of sites in danger – more than a year after the Morrison government succeeded in persuading the world heritage committee not to do so.

As the final parliamentary week of the year builds to a possible censure of a former prime minister, Anthony Albanese is riding high, according to our latest poll. And media organisations have come together to urge the US not to prosecute the WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange.

Australia

Central
Sydney’s Central train station. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP
  • Exclusive | Australians are opting for cheaper overnight trains and coaches to travel interstate, with patronage between Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane more than doubling as rising air fares make flying less attractive.

  • Reef report | The long-awaited UN report on the Great Barrier Reef published overnight made 10 recommendations that could “drastically improve” its outlook, including “clear government commitments to reduce greenhouse emissions”.

  • Poll position | The latest Guardian Essential poll suggests Labor is ahead of the Coalition on the two-party-preferred “plus” measure 51.4% to 43.1%, while voter disapproval of Peter Dutton remains 10 points higher than for the prime minister.

  • Rental stress | More than 40% of low-income households are now in rental stress and struggling to find money to pay for food, heating and healthcare, according to the latest annual index of rental affordability.

  • ‘Creeped out’ | An environmental activist says surveillance of his family by a private investigator hired by the mining company Adani continues to cause “anxiety” and has asked for photographs – some of his nine-year-old daughter – to be destroyed.

World

Protesters march along a street during a rally for the victims of a deadly fire as well as a protest against China’s harsh Covid-19 restrictions in Beijing
Protesters march along a street during a rally for the victims of a deadly fire as well as a protest against China’s harsh Covid-19 restrictions in Beijing yesterday. Photograph: Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images
  • China crisis | Police have barricaded a street in Shanghai where protesters have gathered for the last two nights in anticipation of further rallies against the government’s rigid zero-Covid policies, and a BBC reporter has allegedly been beaten by police. It also emerged that Chinese TV has been censoring coverage of the World Cup that shows fans in the stadiums without masks.

  • Assange plea | The US government must drop its prosecution of the WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange because it is undermining press freedom, according to the media organisations that helped him publish leaked diplomatic cables, including the Guardian.

  • Ukraine morass | Fighting around the key eastern town of Bakhmut has descended into a bloody impasse, with hundreds of dead and injured reported daily, and neither Russian nor Ukrainian forces able to make a significant breakthrough.

  • Drug bust | Police have dismantled a “super cartel” that controlled a third of Europe’s cocaine trade, arresting 49 people in various countries, including one “extremely big fish”.

  • ‘It’s horrendous’ | Helena Bonham Carter has defended her longtime co-star Johnny Depp after his victory in a defamation case against his ex-wife Amber Heard. She also used an interview to defend the Harry Potter creator, JK Rowling, for her stance on gender politics.

Full Story

Members of the All Under One Banner group march through Glasgow to BBC Scotland, demanding independence for Scotland
Members of the All Under One Banner group march through Glasgow to BBC Scotland, demanding independence for Scotland. Photograph: Robert Perry/EPA

A blow for independence in Scotland

The supreme court has ruled that the Scottish parliament cannot hold a second referendum without Westminster’s approval. Where does that leave the independence movement?

In-depth

A row of poker machines
A row of poker machines. Photograph: John Greim/LightRocket/Getty Images

When gambling addicts steal hundreds of thousands of dollars for losing bets, the victims of theft have little recourse, despite companies such as Sportsbet being allowed to keep the ill-gotten wagers gambled through their products. In the latest instalment of our investigation into Australia’s gambling crisis, Stephanie Convery says the system that is meant to regulate the industry is failing.

Not the news

Josie Weise, Alison Whyte and Samantha Hines in Monsters
Josie Weise, Alison Whyte and Samantha Hines in Monsters. Photograph: Pia Johnson

Despite inventive choreography and a terrific turn from Alison Whyte as narrator, Monsters, an ambitious dance-theatre hybrid about a woman searching for her missing sister, doesn’t quite work. Our reviewer Tim Byrne argues that the Stephanie Lake production falls apart when the allegorical becomes literal.

The world of sport

Ghana celebrate their defeat of South Korea at the World Cup
Ghana celebrate their defeat of South Korea at the World Cup. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Media roundup

The Sydney Morning Herald has an exclusive story that a close ally of Scott Morrison – the Liberal MP Alex Hawke – said the former prime minister became “addicted” to power and should have quit politics immediately after the last election. The Age carries analysis of the Victorian election, which highlights how the backlash against Labor in western suburbs was cancelled out in the east. The NT Times reports from the inquest into the death of Kumanjayi Walker that Indigenous Territorians face racism every day. The Courier-Mail reveals Queensland’s 10 weirdest laws. And the Adelaide Advertiser says there has been a surge in extramarital affairs and maps the state’s cheating “hot spots”.

What’s happening today

  • Oil protest | Traditional owners from south-west Queensland and the Lock the Gate Alliance will lead a protest calling on the state government to ban new oil and gas projects on the channel country floodplains of the Lake Eyre Basin.

  • Defence lecture | The former Labor leader Kim Beazley will give a special Ramsay lecture in Sydney about defence and “Australian self-reliance”.

  • Gallery viewing | The Art Gallery of NSW is showing off its new building ahead of its opening to the public next week.

Sign up

If you would like to receive this Morning Mail update to your email inbox every weekday, sign up here. And finish your day with a three-minute snapshot of the day’s main news. Sign up for our Afternoon Update newsletter here.

Prefer notifications? If you’re reading this in our app, just click here and tap “Get notifications” on the next screen for an instant alert when we publish every morning.

Brain teaser

And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day – with plenty more on the Guardian’s Puzzles app for iOS and Android. Until tomorrow.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.