Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
National

The Loop: G7 leaders' Putin jokes, NASA launches from Australia, mystery nightclub deaths and Top Gun hits record

Hi there, it's Monday, June 27. Here's what you need to get going today.

One thing to know right now: An Australian space launch 

It's the first commercial rocket launch in Australia's history and NASA's first from here in over 25 years. Here's the lowdown: 

  • Rain and wind delayed the launch by more than an hour, but take-off happened early on Monday
  • The rocket is expected to fly about 300 kilometres into space to conduct astrophysics studies
  • Yirrkala School co-principal Merrkiyawuy Ganambarr-Stubbs was one of the people who viewed the launch in Arnhem Land and said it was "unbelievable for something like this to happen here on Yolngu country"
The rocket successfully launched from the Arnhem Space Centre.

What you’ll be hearing about today: G7 jokes, Biden and China

  • The key summit (with leaders of Japan, Canada, the US, UK, Italy, France and Germany, plus the EU) saw a massive $860 billion investment program unveiled for developing countries, to rival China's controversial Belt and Road Initiative
  • But world leaders were caught mocking Russia's President Vladimir Putin at the meeting in Germany. Boris Johnson joked they should take their jackets off while Justin Trudeau suggested some horse riding:
  • Ukraine's capital had also been hit with a series of Russian air strikes, which officials say is a warning to those at the meeting
  • And on the international summit front, Anthony Albanese will arrive in Europe later today for a NATO meeting dominated by the war in Ukraine — he'll travel to Paris to meet the French President and has been invited to visit the Ukrainian capital Kyiv (but is taking advice on if that's safe)

And back home:

  • There'll be "significant delays" from tomorrow until the end of the week for commuters across New South Wales, with industrial action incoming
  • The Rail, Tram and Bus Union says drivers will reduce the speed of trains from tomorrow and peak-hour services will be cut by up to 75 per cent — it's down to concerns over safety for the new InterCity train fleet

News while you snoozed

Let's get you up to speed.

Police had been alerted by members of the public to the incident at Scenery Park, East London. (Reuters)
  • Four people have been killed and hundreds were injured after a stand collapsed during a bullfight in the municipality of El Espina in central Colombia, the BBC reported, citing local media
  • Jacinta Allan will be sworn in as Victoria's new deputy premier today, alongside a revamped cabinet. The Labor caucus voted over the weekend, after the resignation of four senior government ministers who announced they would not recontest at this year's state election

The news Australia is searching for

  • Paul McCartney: The former Beatle *finally* made it to the UK's Glastonbury Festival – two years after he was originally slated to headline the event. He also brought Foo Fighters' Dave Grohl on stage for his first public performance since the band's drummer, Taylor Hawkins, died:

One more thing: Top Gun is smashing records

They're feeling the need… the need for speed (and a whole lot of money).

It's just the second film to break the $US1 billion mark at the worldwide box office since the pandemic began.

In its fifth week of release, Top Gun: Maverick has earned slightly more than half of its takings in the United States.

The film is the biggest ever for Tom Cruise, coming 36 years after the original Top Gun film was released.

That's it for now

We'll be back later on with more.

ABC/wires

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.