You can now get Wagga's beloved Lebanese chicken in Melbourne
Lebanese$
After winning hearts in Wagga Wagga, Habibi brought its Lebanese charcoal chicken to Melbourne earlier this year. Birds are marinated for 24 hours in a heady mix of garlic, cumin, coriander and paprika before hitting the rotisserie.
Grab a combo with flatbread, pickles and garlic-herb Habibi sauce, or spice things up with the Blame the Flame wrap – chicken, chips, slaw, Lebanese-style pickles and a garlicky chilli sauce – that's brushed with extra chilli and toasted to order.
Hot tip: Take home some Wagga-made sauces and seasonings. They're part of Habibi's mission to support regional communities with jobs, something echoed in the name – 'my love' in Arabic.

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Click here to get a great deal. "We're trying to be as open as possible, and trying to give updates where we can to work through the situation." Suzuki Queensland is a separate distributor of the brand and contributes around 30 per cent of Jimny sales nationally. It operates in the Sunshine State and NSW's Northern Rivers area, while Suzuki Australia looks after the rest of the country. Customers will be able to cancel orders and have deposits returned upon request. They're also able to keep their order despite no news on when the stop-sale will end, with no indication on when the cars will be released and delivered to buyers. "We're leaving that up to the dealerships and the customers to work through what their preferred sort of course, is, depending on what the delivery status is with each specific customer – whether they're on hold or want to take some money back, we just leave it up to them, case by case," Mr Tobin said. The Jimny XL is the most popular Suzuki both nationally and in Queensland, outselling the Japanese-made three-door Jimny, which isn't impacted by the stop-sale."Five-door has probably been running ahead of the three-door for a year or so, [there has been] a little bit easier supply of five-door, but it has been a best seller," Mr Tobin added. "We're certainly doing as much can to glean some more information. We're just having to be patient – that's all we can do at the moment – until we find out more information." While the three-door Jimny isn't impacted by the stop-sale, it has suffered from a supply interruption of its own. Suzuki confirmed in February 2025 that the three-door Jimny, among other models in its lineup, didn't meet newly introduced Australian Design Rules (ADR) outlining specific technical requirements for autonomous emergency braking (AEB) systems. That meant Suzuki couldn't import any more vehicles beyond March 1, 2025, when ADR 98/00 came into effect. 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While the three-door Jimny isn't impacted by the stop-sale, it has suffered from a supply interruption of its own. Suzuki confirmed in February 2025 that the three-door Jimny, among other models in its lineup, didn't meet newly introduced Australian Design Rules (ADR) outlining specific technical requirements for autonomous emergency braking (AEB) systems. That meant Suzuki couldn't import any more vehicles beyond March 1, 2025, when ADR 98/00 came into effect. The Jimny XL was unaffected as it had a compliant AEB system. Suzuki still has stock of vehicles imported and complied before March 1, however an updated, compliant model won't launch until the first quarter of 2026. Between this and the XL's stop-sale, then, Suzuki's most popular model in Australia has suffered a one-two punch. MORE: Suzuki Australia cancels Jimny XL orders, return deposits MORE: Explore the Suzuki Jimny showroom Content originally sourced from: