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The suffering in Gaza is intolerable

The suffering in Gaza is intolerable

Readers' letters on the Palestine march, workplace mental health, working from home, the need for public servants and home battery subsidies.
Thank you to everyone who showed up at the Sydney Harbour Bridge and to the bold organisers who have worked so long and hard to carry reticent Australians towards this moment.
It was a privilege to join so many tremendous humans who understood that rain was nothing alongside Palestinian suffering.
There were many special moments shared in the middle of the soggy crowd: handing out tiny toy tambourines to fully grown men, joking over spare muesli bars and ponchos, finding out where folk had travelled from.
Marg from Grafton (70) doesn't even get internet access, but checked details at the local library and travelled down overnight, (despite flooding on the tracks at Taree) to stay at the Y. Towards the end she borrowed one of my crutches.
Mums with babies, families with double strollers, kids on scooters, mum under Disney umbrellas, the halt and lame were all swapping chants, banging pots and smiling widely. Every person seemed clear that the suffering in Gaza is intolerable. Bravo to all who put human rights and common sense ahead of fear, belief, half-truths and self-censorship.
Jane Salmon, Killara, NSW
I refer to the editorial ' Corporate leaders need to speak up like Ryan Stokes ' and agree that psychological injuries which lead to workers compensation claims need to be addressed.
Clearly, for Stokes to raise this issue it's becoming a burden on big business and a headache for insurers.
However, Westpac CEO Anthony Miller said ' more could be done ' before legislation is changed.
Think about small business, who employ 900,000 people and struggle every day just to pay the bills. One psychological claim because an employee was told to improve his manner could be the first step to bankruptcy.
In fact, it's not the size of the claim that destroys small business, but the significant increase in the yearly workers compensation bill. In its current form it's a sleeping cost time bomb.
David Button, Breakfast Point, NSW
WFH law will make Victoria even less appealing
The news item about the Victorian Labor government's plan to legislate to ensure that WFH is a worker's legal right is a classic example of governmental overreach (' Vic government to enshrine WFH two days a week in law ').
Premier Jacinta Allan is quoted as saying that 'it's good for the economy'. That viewpoint would be disputed by many and it will no doubt make heavily taxed Victoria an even more unattractive place for some companies and businesses to operate from within.
It is disappointing that Allan is not instead focused upon working tirelessly to reduce her spendthrift government's mammoth amount of state debt.
Dennis Walker, North Melbourne, Vic
Remote-working themselves out of a job
Now that working-from-home rosters are being institutionalised in the public sector, you must question if the same jobs could be just as effectively done in Mumbai or Manila.
With the rise and rise of AI, mass redundancies are inevitable. This will do wonders for Australia's productivity as the only people left in the workforce force will be those creating and adding value.
David Hurburgh, Opossum Bay, Tas
Are all these public servants strictly necessary?
Rather than arguing about where public servants work, we should be asking why we need them at all. Take aged care and health departments, where over 7000 employees work in non-patient-facing roles. With artificial intelligence and automation revolutionising administrative processes globally, this represents a massive productivity opportunity.
Every dollar spent on bureaucratic overhead is a dollar not invested in frontline care, infrastructure, or innovation. While other nations streamline their public sectors using technology, Australia maintains bloated administrative layers that serve the bureaucracy rather than the public.
The real issue isn't remote work flexibility – it's relevance. Modern AI systems can process applications, manage compliance and coordinate services faster and more accurately than human administrators. Robotic process automation can handle routine tasks 24/7 without sick leave, superannuation, or office space.
Countries like Estonia have demonstrated how digital transformation can deliver better citizen services with dramatically fewer public servants. Their e-governance model processes 99% of public services online, eliminating countless administrative positions while improving service delivery.
If Australia seriously wants to lift living standards and national productivity, we need a public service focused on essential functions, not job creation. This means embracing technology to eliminate redundant roles and redirecting resources toward genuine public value – teachers, nurses, police, and infrastructure.
The question isn't where public servants should work, but whether many of these positions should exist at all.
Peter Worn, Melbourne, Vic
Home batteries are good business, too
Yes, the battery subsidy really is the easy option (' Labor's home battery subsidy low hanging-fruit in energy transition ').
Obviously cheaper than taxpayers footing the whole bill for the energy storage we so badly need, to carry the cheap daytime excess through to the evening. It will not only save for those who invest, it could also drive down the cost of power to all consumers. But these new batteries need to be managed wisely if they are to have the same effect as community batteries or the commercial 'big' batteries.
Having played the wholesale electricity market ourselves, with Amber managing our home batteries for the last two years, it has become bleedingly obvious why the overall cost of power has gotten so high. Several times a year, the wholesale spot price for electricity goes through the roof, reaching prices more than 100 times the normal. Those who can sell energy into the market at such times are able to make a small fortune. The wholesale feed-in tariff can get to $15 or more per kilowatt hour. Our two home batteries have earned us as much as $380 in just one day.
But our batteries are tiny compared to say the Tallawarra gas-fired 'peaker' across the lake from our home. A quick calculation suggests they could be earning several million dollars an hour in such circumstances.
It is an expensive exercise to keep the grid working when the prices get so high, but they do it. To my knowledge, the grid hasn't suffered any blackouts due to power shortages, so we can only assume they have always had enough in reserve to keep the lights on.
Clearly our privatised electricity grid can only turn on the last of the big players in the spot market by sending the price through the roof occasionally. And consumers will keep picking up that tab until there are enough suppliers in the market to take away that monopoly.
Roll on Snowy 2.0, and more batteries.
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Israel wants world attention on hostages held in Gaza
Israel wants world attention on hostages held in Gaza

News.com.au

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Israel wants world attention on hostages held in Gaza

Israel said Monday the plight of hostages held in Gaza should top the global agenda, after Palestinian militants released videos showing them looking emaciated, heightening fears for their lives after nearly 22 months in captivity. Foreign Minister Gideon Saar, in a press briefing ahead of the UN Security Council session on the issue, said that "the world must put an end to the phenomenon of kidnapping civilians. It must be front and centre on the world stage". Of the 251 hostages seized during Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the ongoing Gaza war, 49 are still held in the Palestinian territory, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead. The UN session was called after Palestinian militant group Hamas and its ally Islamic Jihad published last week three videos showing hostages Rom Braslavski and Evyatar David appearing weak and emaciated, causing deep shock and distress in Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, under mounting international pressure to halt the war, said on Sunday he was "shocked" by the "horror videos of our precious sons". Netanyahu said he had asked the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which oversaw past hostage releases during short-lived truces, to provide food and medical treatment to the Israeli captives. Hamas' armed wing, the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, said it was willing to allow Red Cross access to the hostages in exchange for permanent humanitarian access for food and medicine into all of Gaza, where UN-mandated experts have warned famine was unfolding. The ICRC said in a statement it was "appalled by the harrowing videos" and reiterated its "call to be granted access to the hostages". - 'Only through a deal' - Netanyahu's government has faced repeated accusations by relatives of hostages and other critics of not doing enough to rescue the captives. "Netanyahu is leading Israel and the hostages to ruin," said a campaign group representing families of the captives. In a statement, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said that "for 22 months, the public has been sold the illusion that military pressure and intense fighting will bring the hostages back." "The truth must be said: expanding the war endangers the lives of the hostages, who are already in immediate mortal danger." Mediation efforts led by Qatar, Egypt and the United States have failed to secure an elusive truce. On Saturday, tens of thousands of people had rallied in the coastal hub of Tel Aviv to call on the government to secure the release of the remaining hostages. Hundreds of retired Israeli security officials including former heads of intelligence agencies have urged US President Donald Trump to pressure their own government to end the war. "It is our professional judgement that Hamas no longer poses a strategic threat to Israel," the former officials wrote in an open letter shared with the media on Monday. The war, nearing its 23rd month, "is leading the State of Israel to lose its security and identity," said Ami Ayalon, former director of the Shin Bet security service, in a video released to accompany the letter. The letter argued that the Israeli military "has long accomplished the two objectives that could be achieved by force: dismantling Hamas's military formations and governance." "The third, and most important, can only be achieved through a deal: bringing all the hostages home," it added. - 'We are starving' - Hamas's 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Israel's campaign in Gaza has killed at least 60,933 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory's health ministry, which are deemed reliable by the UN. Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli fire on Monday killed at least 15 Palestinians, including eight who were waiting to collect food aid from a site in central Gaza. In Gaza City, Umm Osama Imad was mourning a relative she said was killed while trying to reach an aid distribution point. "We are starving... He went to bring flour for his family," she said. "The flour is stained with blood. We don't want the flour anymore. Enough!" Further south, in Deir el-Balah, Palestinian man Abdullah Abu Musa told AFP his daughter and her family were killed in an Israeli strike. Decyring the attack on "young children", he said that "perhaps the world will wake up -- but it never will".

US promises Gaza food plan after envoy visit
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The Australian

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US promises Gaza food plan after envoy visit

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The foundation said it had delivered its 100-millionth meal in Gaza during the visit by Witkoff and US ambassador Mike Huckabee. Gaza's civil defence agency said 22 people were killed by Israeli gunfire and air strikes on Friday, including eight who were waiting to collect food aid. In its report on the GHF centres, Human Rights Watch accused the Israeli military of using starvation as a weapon of war. "Israeli forces are not only deliberately starving Palestinian civilians, but they are now gunning them down almost every day as they desperately seek food for their families," said HRW's associate crisis and conflict director, Belkis Wille. "US-backed Israeli forces and private contractors have put in place a flawed, militarised aid distribution system that has turned aid distributions into regular bloodbaths." 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Anthony Albanese to announce $31m mobile TAFE centres during visit to the 2025 Garma Festival
Anthony Albanese to announce $31m mobile TAFE centres during visit to the 2025 Garma Festival

The Australian

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Anthony Albanese to announce $31m mobile TAFE centres during visit to the 2025 Garma Festival

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New Liberal leader Sussan Ley will not attend the Garma Festival. Instead, shadow attorney-general Julian Leeser – who stood down from the front bench in 2023 because of his support of the Voice – will represent the Coalition. Ms Ley will, instead, travel to the Kimberley in Western Australia for a four-day listening tour with Indigenous communities and organisations. The Opposition Leader will also be joined by Coalition spokeswoman for Indigenous Australians Kerrynne Liddle and WA MP for Durack Melissa Price. Ms Ley said Mr Albanese had a 'personal obligation' to use his appearance at the Garma Festival to detail his government's plan to closing the gap. 'It is not good enough to just give speeches at festivals, we need to see his plan,' she said. 'Since the Voice Anthony Albanese has stepped back from Indigenous issues, that is not good enough. He led the referendum process, a process which was unsuccessful. So what is his path forward?' The four-day event, which started on Friday, will be the 25th anniversary of the Garma festival, which celebrates Yolngu culture – the name of Aboriginal peoples who inhabit northeastern Arnhem Land. The theme of this year's festival is 'rom ga waŋa wataŋu', or 'the law of the land, standing firm'. Read related topics: Anthony Albanese Jessica Wang NewsWire Federal Politics Reporter Jessica Wang is a federal politics reporter for NewsWire based in the Canberra Press Gallery. She previously covered NSW state politics for the Wire and has also worked at and Mamamia covering breaking news, entertainment, and lifestyle. @imjesswang_ Jessica Wang

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