Australia news live: Sydney to get first new cathedral in more than a century; Labor to boost spending on military drones
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Harry and Meghan touch down in Australia
Prince Harry and Meghan have reportedly touched down in Melbourne to begin a four-day visit to Australia.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex will visit Melbourne and Sydney together, while Harry will head to Canberra solo, for a private trip described as a “faux-royal” tour.
You can read details about their schedule, including several expensive ticketed events, here:
Shadow minister says immigration proposal reflects need to have the ‘right people in our country’
Melissa McIntosh, the shadow minister for the NDIS, said it is “about time” the Coalition lay out a harder stance on immigration.
McIntosh was asked this morning on RN Breakfast if migrants were an asset to Australia. She replied:
Of course. I come from a migrant family. My dad came here in the 1950s to create a better life for him and his family and worked really hard for us.
This is the story of Australia, but we need to have the right people in our country who love our country, who share our values.
You have to be sticking your head in the sand if you can’t see that there are issues now with some of that, stemming from the people who are coming here who don’t share our values.
Sydney to get first new cathedral in more than a century
Sydney is getting its first new Roman Catholic Cathedral in more than a century, part of a massive 7.7-hectare integrated precinct in the northern suburb of Waitara. Irish architect Niall McLaughlin, winner of the Royal Institute of British Architects’ Royal Gold Medal, will lead the design.
The new cathedral is expected to be a unifying force for more than 250,000 Catholics in more than two dozen parishes in the Diocese of Broken Bay, stretching from the lower north shore to the Central Coast.
London-based architect McLaughlin will work alongside Australian executive firm Hayball during the construction that will feature timber framing and sandstone structures inspired by the region’s Hawkesbury River-Nepean River watershed and local bluffs.
The new cathedral will be integrated with a new education campus incorporating St Leo’s Catholic College and a new base for CatholicCare to support seniors and people living with disabilities.
The project will be funded through a combination of the church’s institutional capital and a dedicated fundraising appeal for philanthropic donations.
Archbishop Anthony Randazzo, who was recently promoted by Pope Leo XIV to a senior legal role at the Vatican, will stay on as the temporary administrator of the diocese to oversee the project before leaving for Rome.
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Taylor discusses new hardline immigration plans
The opposition leader, Angus Taylor, said his new proposal for immigration policy is needed to “put Australian value first” as he’s set to unveil the full details of the hardline plans, including a Trump-style social media vetting process.
You can read more about the plan here:
Taylor spoke to ABC AM this morning, saying:
We know people have come to our country in recent times who don’t share our core values, our belief in democracy, our belief in the rule of law, our belief in basic freedoms.
Taylor was asked how a social media vetting process would work, considering Asio can already check social media of incoming migrants if the agency has concerns. The opposition leader said the change would create a “cross-border, cross-agency taskforce” to do so, and allocate more resources to check.
“What we don’t have is a legally binding and enforceable values test in the Migration Act, and we don’t have a cross-agency taskforce set up in this way which would receive extra funding,” he said.
It’s bolstering it and giving it extra resources and putting this team together in a way where they can ensure that extremists, that radicals who do not believe in our way of life, don’t come into the country.
Taylor said he believes the “vast majority” of migrants who come to Australia do the “right thing” and love the country.
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Marles says Australia still hopes strait of Hormuz will reopen as Trump blockade begins
The defence minister, Richard Marles, said Australia still wants to see the strait of Hormuz open after the US naval blockade of Iranian ports began on Monday evening.
Marles spoke to RN Breakfast, saying the government was “deeply invested” in having the strait open and the global fuel supply chain “return to normal”. He said:
We are working with all of our partners around efforts that are being taken forward in respect of the straits of Hormuz and how Australia can best contribute. … We really need to see what plays out throughout the remainder of the ceasefire.
The minister added he believes the US, too, wants to see the strait of Hormuz open, despite Trump’s blockade.
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Labor to boost spending on military drones
The federal government plans to spend between $2bn and $5bn more on drones, part of Australia’s new national defence strategy.
Set to be released by the defence minister, Richard Marles, on Thursday, the plans will bring spending on uncrewed and autonomous capabilities by the defence force to between $12bn and $15bn over the next decade.
Local manufacturing will also be prioritised in the plans.
“The war in Ukraine and conflicts in the Middle East underscore the rapid advancements in these technologies, and the ability for these systems to generate significant asymmetric advantage against larger, more expensive platforms,” Marles says.
Expanding our fleet of autonomous and uncrewed systems across all domains will not only help the ADF keep our nation safe, but will boost Australia’s sovereign defence industry – supporting local jobs and harnessing Australian innovation.
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Melbourne to Thailand flight diverted after passenger’s alleged behaviour
A 37-year-old woman faced court on Monday after her alleged disruptive behaviour forced an international flight bound for Thailand to divert to Perth.
Australian federal police (AFP) said airline staff alerted them to an incident on Sunday where the passenger allegedly acted in an “increasingly erratic manner … before escalating to verbally abusing passengers and cabin crew”.
The flight diverted to Perth airport, where AFP officers boarded the aircraft and removed the woman after she allegedly refused to exit the aircraft as directed.
She appeared in Perth magistrates court on Monday, charged with one count of behaving in an offensive and disorderly manner endangering safety on an aircraft. The offence carries a maximum penalty of a $16,500 fine. She is due to reappear in court on 11 May.
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Good morning, Nick Visser here to take over the blog. Let’s get to it.
Suspected crocodile remains dumped on Adelaide roadside
Reptile remains, believed to be from a crocodile, have been found dumped on the side of the road in Adelaide.
A spokesperson for the state’s environment and water department confirmed in a statement that department staff had “collected the remains of a reptile at Waterloo Corner”. They said:
The remains, which were dumped on the side of the road at Coleman Road, will be analysed in an effort to confirm the species and any other information.
It is not currently known how the remains came to be located at the site.
The department asked anyone with information to visit the Call it Out wildlife crime portal, or contact CrimeStoppers on 1800 333 000.
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Food supplied to hospitals and nursing homes at risk due to fuel crisis
The authors say it is the first comprehensive assessment of public food procurement in Australia. Leah Galvin, co-lead of GFPA and report co-author, says:
A different approach can increase the use of fresh, local produce, redirect spending to Australian farmers and producers, support the people working in public food service kitchens, and generate real benefits for Australia.
The authors also emphasise the prescience of the release of the report, which comes as Australia’s food system and supply chains, including food supplied to public institutions such as hospitals and aged care centres, are all at risk of breakdown due to the fuel crisis triggered by the war in Iran.
Dheepa Jeyapalan, also a co-lead of GFPA and co-author of the report, says:
Better public food procurement is not about spending more, it’s about spending smarter. The evidence is clear, public support is strong, and the solutions exist. Given the threat to our food system caused by the global fuel and fertiliser crisis, now is the moment for leadership.
Health experts have previously warned governments there needs to be a national food policy movement away from multinational corporations and towards healthier, more local food systems.
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Poor hospital food adding to health costs, report says
Australian governments are spending $2.13bn every year feeding people in hospitals, aged care facilities and other public settings – low-quality food which contributes to poor diet and long-term health costs, a new report has found.
That investment (which equates to $6m a day) is one of the most powerful policy levers available to governments to improve national health outcomes, but it is currently marked by a near-exclusive focus on cost and scale, according to the report titled Transforming the Public Plate.
Commissioned by philanthropic organisation Macdoch Foundation and released by the newly formed Good Food Purchasing Australia (GFPA) initiative, it has found public food procurement is dominated by large suppliers and multinationals, with limited pathways for small, medium, local and First Nations producers to participate.
Without a national framework of standards to drive better outcomes from public food spending, the authors say Australia is falling behind other comparable countries such as the UK, EU and parts of the US.
Indeed, when Guardian investigated hospital food around the world, what Australia was serving paled in comparison with more wholesome options overseas. And a big part of the problem was not using fresh food but contracting out food preparation services to private companies to produce meals in bulk and deliver them frozen.
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