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NITV Radio Full - 28/07/2025

NITV Radio Full - 28/07/2025

SBS Australia5 days ago
The newly reformed Coalition has yet to determine its position on net zero targets, with differing views held by MPs. Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce says he looks forward to the debate over emission reduction targets that will be triggered when he introduces his private member's bill that proposes repealing Australia's emission reduction targets. NITV Radio speaks with Senior Curator Hanna Presley for an exhibition at the Buxton Contemporary, The Veil, currently until November later this year. A new report has found that First Nations Australians are twice as likely as other Australians to have trouble accessing their superannuation.The independent research highlights the systemic barriers First Nations peoples face which include rigid policies, inaccessible customer service and a lack of accountability.
That and more on NITV Radio.
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Bangladesh will hold historic elections in 2026 but millions of its citizens will not be able to vote
Bangladesh will hold historic elections in 2026 but millions of its citizens will not be able to vote

ABC News

time27 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Bangladesh will hold historic elections in 2026 but millions of its citizens will not be able to vote

Canberra man Mizan Rahman will fly more than 9,000 kilometres to vote when Bangladesh holds its general election next year. "I've never had the chance to vote in Bangladesh, where national elections are celebrated like a grand festival," he told the ABC. Asked why he would spend thousands of dollars to travel for the purpose of casting a single ballot, the Bangladeshi Australian dual national was unequivocal. "Under Sheikh Hasina's regime, elections were essentially nonexistent, and the democratic system was dismantled," he said. "I longed for the end of that era, and I've decided that the best way to celebrate its fall is by standing alongside those who fought for our right to vote and casting my ballot in this historic election. Frustration over inflation, a lack of high-quality jobs and widespread corruption under prime minister Sheikh Hasina led to student protests deemed the "world's first gen Z revolution". She fled into exile in India — paving the way for new elections in April 2026. The estimated 7.5 million Bangladeshis who live in other countries, including Mr Rahman, have the legal right to vote in elections from overseas. Sydney-based researcher Ashraful Azad said that in practice, however, complex postal voting procedures prevented them from doing so. Bangladesh is the sixth-largest migrant-sending country in the world, according to the International Organization for Migration. Many Bangladeshis work largely in wealthy Gulf nations in the Middle East, as well as parts of Asia including Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore. A smaller, though growing, population of highly skilled migrants live in Western nations including Australia. Bangladeshis abroad provide a vital source of economic growth via remittances they send home. But it remained "almost impossible for this large diaspora to vote", Dr Azad found in recent research for the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance. Local media reported in April that the Bangladesh Election Commission was assessing the feasibility of postal ballots, online voting or voting by proxy for overseas residents, but would not commit to a timeframe for implementation. Iffath Yeasmine, who is studying for her masters in Australia, told the ABC she wanted to be able to choose the next government. "But logistically speaking, it won't be possible for me to fly from Sydney to Dhaka to Chittagong, where I'm from, just to vote," she said. Like many Bangladeshis, Ms Yeasmine said she had been unaware of her right to vote overseas — but would like to see the country's interim government make that a reality. The ABC contacted the Bangladesh Election Commission and the country's embassy in Australia for comment but did not receive a response by deadline. "It's really important that our voice is heard," said Ms Yeasmine, who previously worked for the United Nations in Bangladesh. "We don't want to limit our right [to participate in the election] to a few social media posts." Main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) boycotted the 2024 general election because it argued Ms Hasina was staging a "sham election". Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate appointed as interim leader of Bangladesh, has pledged to restore its democratic institutions. "Sheikh Hasina was the key to the problem. She held fake elections one after another," Mr Yunus told FRANCE24 last year. "We are free from all the oppression … all the mismanagement, all the corruption." Yet holding elections announced for April 2026 will be a major undertaking. Despite intending to fly to Bangladesh, Mr Rahman acknowledged that "holding a fully free and fair election will be difficult". "The anti-Awami League forces are fragmented and lack unity," he said. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party is expected to win government at the general election — not least because the Awami League has, controversially, been barred from participating. While the BNP and its former ally, the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami party, might appeal to segments of Bangladesh's Muslim majority, Flinders University democracy researcher Intifar Chowdhury wrote recently that they had "limited resonance with younger voters". "At the same time, radical, right-wing, Islamist forces are exploiting the vacuum to reassert themselves, exacerbating tensions between Muslims and the Hindu minority," she said. "We would be very keen to vote," said Chapal Choudhury, a Bangladeshi Hindu who has lived in Australia since 2004. Hindus make up almost 10 per cent of Bangladesh's 174 million people, many of whom had supported Ms Hasina's secular-leaning Awami League. Once Ms Hasina was booted from power, rioters targeted symbols of the Awami League and, in some cases, Hindus. Mr Choudhury said he was concerned about the safety of his family — half of whom he said had already fled to Canada or India. "The Islamic fundamentalists are taking the opportunity, exploiting the situation, to go after the minorities," he said. Human Rights Watch alleged this week that Bangladesh's interim government had used arbitrary detention to target perceived political opponents. "The hope of the thousands who braved lethal violence a year ago when they opposed Sheikh Hasina's abusive rule to build a rights-respecting democracy remains unfulfilled," said Human Rights Watch's deputy Asia director, Meenakshi Ganguly. "The interim government appears stuck, juggling an unreformed security sector, sometimes violent religious hardliners, and political groups that seem more focused on extracting vengeance on Hasina's supporters than protecting Bangladeshis' rights." The Bangladeshi Ministry of Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs was approached for comment by the ABC. Mr Choudhury said members of his family in Bangladesh who historically supported the Awami League had been threatened or extorted since Ms Hasina's fall from power. While Ms Yeasmine agreed with blocking the Awami League from participating in the next general election, she said the voices of their voters still mattered. "I want fairness for everyone, even for the people who had supported the ousted prime minister," she said. "I want safety and security for them as well because their voice matters in democracy."

Tasmania election counting ends with major parties retaining the same number of seats
Tasmania election counting ends with major parties retaining the same number of seats

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Tasmania election counting ends with major parties retaining the same number of seats

The Liberals and Labor have kept the same number of seats in Tasmania, as two weeks of counting wrapped up in the state's snap election. Eighteen seats were needed to form a majority government but both parties fell short, the incumbent government secured 14 seats, Labor won 10 and the Greens five and other parties getting six. The final count played out on Saturday in the electorate of Bass in a race between Labor candidate Geoff Lyons and independent George Razay, seeing the independent take the final seat by 674 votes. It was the second time Tasmanians voted within 16 months, after a no-confidence motion in Premier Jeremy Rockliff introduced by Labor leader Dean Winter passed 18-17 in June. Mr Winter claimed the botched roll out of new Spirit of Tasmania vessels, the state of the budget and the controversial Macquarie Point Stadium project were examples of Mr Rockliff's failed leadership. Instead of resigning, Mr Rockliff remained Premier, requesting a snap poll be held to determine his fate instead. Tasmanian Governor Barbara Baker approved the request, deciding there would be no alternative as the Opposition leader refused to put together a minority coalition of his own and the Liberal Party room 'unanimously' supported Premier Rockliff continue in his role. Following the election, the embattled Liberal government won most of the seats but fell short of the 18 required to form a majority government. Party leaders now need support from crossbenchers to form a minority government. The Liberal Party needs support from four crossbenchers to remain in government, while Labor requires support from The Greens and two crossbenchers to form a minority.

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