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Flame-licked flatbread and HSP bites: Your cheat sheet to a revived Lebanese diner

Flame-licked flatbread and HSP bites: Your cheat sheet to a revived Lebanese diner

The Age29-06-2025
'In Middle Eastern culture, hospitality is a way of life – the door is always open, the coffee is always brewing, and guests are welcomed like family.' For Joseph Rahme, running restaurants is about more than just feeding people.
'My passion for food stems from my family and cultural identity,' he says.
It's that warmth that he's tried to weave into his contemporary Lebanese diner Isme since it first opened in 2021 in the backstreets of Fitzroy and, now, in its new location in Thornbury.
Despite the venue's popularity, a series of challenges relating to the Fitzroy site plus COVID lockdowns led Rahme to shut up shop in 2022. But it wasn't the end of Isme.
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Qantas set for big fine after illegally sacking workers
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Perth Now

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Qantas set for big fine after illegally sacking workers

Australia's largest airline is staring down the barrel of another nine-figure fine for illegally sacking more than 1800 workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Federal Court will hand down a hefty penalty to Qantas on Monday in what will be the latest court blow for the airline after a scandal-plagued recent tenure. Qantas outsourced its baggage handlers, cleaners and ground staff in 2020, in a move the court ruled was designed to curb union bargaining power in wage negotiations. It appealed the ruling to the High Court but the decision was not overturned, paving the way for Monday's penalty. The Transport Workers Union has sought the maximum penalty of $121 million, while Qantas has urged Justice Michael Lee to impose a "mid-range" penalty between $40 million and $80 million. Qantas will cop the fine on top of a $120 million compensation payment it has made to the ground staff for their economic loss, pain and suffering since their jobs were outsourced during the pandemic. It has argued the actions were a mistake, not a deliberate breach of the law. Qantas also sold tickets to cancelled flights for several years, triggering more legal turmoil and a $100 million fine after it was sued by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission. The carrier, which was under the control of Alan Joyce at the time of the illegal sacking, lost billions of dollars during the pandemic, which decimated the aviation sector. But the former CEO did not address the scandal when he spoke at an aviation conference on Thursday, instead spruiking his ability to keep the airline afloat in unprecedented times. "But here's the real insight: resilience isn't a reaction … it's a decision made years in advance, often when it's uncomfortable, even unpopular," he said. "Qantas was the only major Australian airline not to go bankrupt during or after the pandemic … that wasn't luck. That was resilience."

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