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‘Do it immediately': Ray Hadley lashes out at shark net madness

‘Do it immediately': Ray Hadley lashes out at shark net madness

News.com.au5 days ago
Premier Chris Minns must act now to stop the removal of shark nets from Sydney beaches ahead of the summer season, starting September 1.
Three councils, Waverley, Northern Beaches and Central Coast, have been given the option to trial one beach each without a shark net.
The Greens are being blamed, but Central Coast Mayor Lawrie McKinna says he was not involved in the decision: 'That decision was taken by the administrator. We don't want to remove shark nets from our beaches'. He said people travelled to the area specifically because of the safety of its beaches.
So who is playing Russian roulette with swimmers and surfers?
According to McKinna, it's the Minns Labor government - and particularly the left faction led by Upper House MP Penny Sharpe.
Chris Minns, with a stroke of the pen, you can stop this. You can say: 'No, the nets are staying'. If there is a shark attack on one of these beaches next summer after the nets are removed, the blame will fall squarely on your shoulders.
Pick up the pen. Do it. You must act immediately.
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Garma Festival hears NT government 'is not listening', should learn from Indigenous leaders and not play 'cheap politics'
Garma Festival hears NT government 'is not listening', should learn from Indigenous leaders and not play 'cheap politics'

ABC News

time24 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Garma Festival hears NT government 'is not listening', should learn from Indigenous leaders and not play 'cheap politics'

After a politically turbulent week in the Northern Territory, the prime minister has joined Indigenous leaders in remote Arnhem Land to call for unity at the 25th edition of Garma Festival. Notably, Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro — who has pushed ahead with a tough-on-crime rhetoric, despite backlash from elders, legal experts and paediatricians — was not in attendance. In an emotional address at Garma on Saturday, independent Mulka MP Yiŋiya Mark Guyula said the NT government was "making costly mistakes" by ignoring advocates. He said the cultural festival had become "critical" for the survival of Indigenous Territorians, and it was "about healing the people", living together in unity, sharing to find a pathway forward, and working together to achieve harmony. In just over a week, the NT's Country Liberal Party (CLP) government has: Mr Guyula accused the NT government of pursuing policies that disproportionately impacted vulnerable people and treated Aboriginal people like they are "animals". He said prisons and watch houses were keeping detainees in "inhumane conditions" for extended periods, which caused trauma and taught Indigenous inmates "a criminal culture, not our culture". "Since the CLP government came to power, 11 months ago, there has been a 30 per cent increase in Aboriginal [being incarcerated] — the jails are full," Mr Guyula said. "On Thursday, I watched the government pass another bill on urgency with no consultation of leaders and elders, no consultation of communities, no consultation of legal experts." The Indigenous MP said he had moved to censure the government — a formal parliamentarian process to express dissatisfaction — for not consulting with Aboriginal elders, but on Thursday the government rejected the motion. Mr Guyula told the Garma crowd that Indigenous clans "understand each other, so that we know how to help one another", and urged all sides of politics to do the same. "The government approach at the moment, of aggressive actions, does not address the underlying issues. "We have answers, but the government needs to listen and work with us. "We are fed up with the disrespect and we are fed up with being told, 'We know what's best for you'." Prime Minister Anthony Albanese echoed the remote NT leader's words, and said "the privilege of government is the chance to serve this nation and to change it, to leave it for the better". In his Garma address on Saturday, he said the federal government hoped to deliver policies that would help rebuild remote Indigenous communities. "But it's also about pushing back against those who only ever talk in terms of cost or waste or problems, without solutions — those who choose the cheap politics of division, over the patient work of lasting change," the prime minister said. Mr Albanese said anyone looking "to turn the grace and generosity of a welcome to country, or what flag you stand in front of, into a political weapon" was misguided. "The way forward is to invest in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people," he said. "Trust in their aspirations and draw from their knowledge, because when we lay these strong foundations together, there is no limit to what we can build together." While addressing the festival on Friday, NT Minister for Aboriginal Affairs Steve Edgington was asked what the territory CLP government had done to improve outcomes for Indigenous people since it was elected last year. "We want to increase opportunities for leaders in those communities to make decisions when it comes to funding and how services should be delivered." The minister pointed to the housing shortage as a root cause of youth crime, and said the lack of available accommodation had driven poor health, education and employment outcomes. When asked if the NT government had consulted with Aboriginal groups about the youth justice reforms that passed parliament this week, Mr Edgington said he "doesn't have the data in front of him".

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