
Netanyahu hits out at Albanese, says ‘weak' Australia PM 'betrayed' Israel, Jewish community
Netanyahu's comment followed Israel's revocation of the visas of Australian diplomats to the Palestinian Authority on Monday, after a decision by Canberra to recognise a Palestinian state and cancel the visa of an Israeli lawmaker.
"History will remember Albanese for what he is: A weak politician who betrayed Israel and abandoned Australia's Jews," Netanyahu said on the official prime minister's X account in English.
The Israeli lawmaker had been due to meet with Australia's Jewish community, which has faced a sharp rise in antisemitic attacks since the beginning of Israel's war with Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza, almost two years ago.
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Monday called Israel's visa revocation counter-step an "unjustified reaction" and said Netanyahu's government was increasing Israel's diplomatic isolation.
Israel has been facing mounting international pressure over the toll its military offensive has taken on the civilian population in the shattered Gaza Strip.
Albanese said on August 12 that Netanyahu was "in denial" about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
Albanese made his remark a day after announcing Australia may recognise a Palestinian state at the United Nations general Assembly in September, following France, Britain and Canada.
Netanyahu has said this would serve as a reward for Hamas' October 7 2023 attack on Israel, which triggered the Gaza war.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Hindu
18 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Israel demands release of all hostages after Hamas backs new truce offer
A senior Israeli official on Tuesday (August 19, 2025) said the government stood firm on its call for the release of all hostages in any future Gaza deal, after Hamas accepted a new truce proposal. Mediators are awaiting an official Israeli response to the plan, a day after Hamas signalled its readiness for a fresh round of talks aimed at ending nearly two years of war. Mediator Qatar expressed guarded optimism for the new proposal, noting that it was "almost identical" to an earlier version agreed to by Israel. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, a senior Israeli official told AFP the government's stance had not changed and demanded the release of all hostages in any deal. The two foes have held on-and-off indirect negotiations throughout the war, resulting in two short truces during which Israeli hostages were released in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, but they have ultimately failed to broker a lasting ceasefire. Qatar and Egypt, backed by the United States, have mediated the frequent rounds of shuttle diplomacy. Egypt said Monday that it and Qatar had sent the new proposal to Israel, adding "the ball is now in its court". Qatari foreign ministry spokesman Majed al-Ansari said on Tuesday that Hamas had given a "very positive response, and it truly was almost identical to what the Israeli side had previously agreed to". "We cannot make any claims that a breakthrough has been made. But we do believe it is a positive point," he added. - Mounting pressure - According to a report in Egyptian state-linked outlet Al-Qahera News, the latest deal proposes an initial 60-day truce, a partial hostage release, the freeing of some Palestinian prisoners and provisions allowing for the entry of aid. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has yet to publicly comment on the plan, but said last week that his country would accept "an agreement in which all the hostages are released at once and according to our conditions for ending the war". Senior Hamas official Mahmoud Mardawi said on social media that his group had "opened the door wide to the possibility of reaching an agreement, but the question remains whether Netanyahu will once again close it, as he has done in the past". Hamas's acceptance of the proposal comes as Netanyahu faces increasing pressure at home and abroad to end the war. On Sunday, tens of thousands took to the streets in the Israeli city of Tel Aviv to call for the end of the war and a deal to free the remaining hostages still being held captive. Of the 251 hostages taken during Hamas's October 2023 attack that triggered the war, 49 are still in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead. The new proposal also comes after Israel's security cabinet approved plans to conquer Gaza City, fanning fears the new offensive will worsen the already catastrophic humanitarian crisis in the devastated territory. Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir -- who has staunchly opposed ending the war -- slammed the plan, warning of a "tragedy" if Netanyahu "gives in to Hamas". - 'Unbearable' - Gaza's civil defence agency reported that 31 people were killed Tuesday by Israeli strikes and fire across the territory. Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP the situation was "very dangerous and unbearable" in the Zeitoun and Sabra neighbourhoods of Gaza City, where he said "artillery shelling continues intermittently". The Israeli military declined to comment on specific troop movements, saying only that it was "operating to dismantle Hamas military capabilities" and took "feasible precautions to mitigate civilian harm". Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties accessing swaths of the Palestinian territory mean AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls and details provided by the civil defence agency or the Israeli military. Sabra resident Hussein al-Dairi, 44, said "tanks are firing shells and mortars, and drones are firing bullets and missiles" in the neighbourhood. "We heard on the news that Hamas had agreed to a truce, but the occupation is escalating the war against us, the civilians," he added. Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Israel's offensive has killed at least 62,064 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, which the United Nations considers reliable.


Hindustan Times
18 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
UN flags exclusion of Afghan women in education, jobs under Taliban rule
Four years into the current rule in Afghanistan, women remain excluded from government structures as well as the right to education and work, the UN Special Representative for Women in Afghanistan has said, Tolo News reported. The UN stressed that despite ongoing challenges, it remains committed to investing in organizations, businesses, and ensuring women's participation in international dialogues to safeguard their rights.(AFP) Susan Ferguson stressed that the continuation of this situation is harmful not only to women but to Afghanistan as a whole. She stated: "Regarding education and employment, women and girls are still barred from attending secondary schools, universities, and most jobs. This has destroyed the future of an entire generation of young Afghan girls. The exclusion of women not only harms them personally, but also damages families, communities, and the country as a whole." According to UN findings, half of female employees in civil society organizations have lost their jobs this year due to reduced funding. Ferguson emphasized that Afghan women and girls are bearing the heaviest burden of declining international aid. She added: "Half of female staff in civil society organizations have lost their jobs due to funding cuts. More than one-third of these organizations reported that if the current situation continues, their ability to reach women and girls will be severely reduced, limited, or completely halted." The UN stressed that despite ongoing challenges, it remains committed to investing in organizations, businesses, and ensuring women's participation in international dialogues to safeguard their rights, Tolo News reported. Women's rights activist Faryal Sayedzada told Tolo News: "The deprivation of Afghan girls and women from education will have negative consequences and will harm Afghanistan in the years to come. We hope that with the start of the new academic year, the Afghan government will prepare a procedure that allows Afghan girls to continue their education." Human rights issues, especially women's right to education and employment, remain key points of contention between the international community and Afghanistan's interim government, frequently debated over the past four years. Meanwhile, a spokesperson for the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan recently said that work is underway on this matter in order to obtain proper Sharia approval, Tolo News reported. (ANI)


New Indian Express
26 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
The frightening power Laura Loomer wields in Trump's America
"#ProudIslamophobe". That's how Laura Loomer, far-right influencer and a close ally of US President Donald Trump, chooses to describe herself. As the New York Times noted, among the the 32-year-old's 1.7 million followers on her reactivated X account are Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, FBI Director Kash Patel, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and Stephen Miller, Trump's chief domestic policy adviser. Talk of having the eyes and ears of an establishment... It was an online pressure campaign from this "blunt instrument" that encouraged the US government to recently halt visas for children injured in Israel's genocidal war on Gaza who are in need of urgent medical care. With Loomer egging her base on, the self-proclaimed "Land of the Free" decided, without the slightest compunction, that freedom does not extend to dying children. Why? Simply because Trump's red-hat fan base threw a temper tantrum online. Loomer is not some random troll. She has built a career on hate-mongering and manufactured outrage, and was banned from nearly every major platform – Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and even ride-sharing apps. An "investigative journalist and free spirit", according to her Twitter bio, who swears by Trump, Loomer has also called herself a "pro-white nationalist". Her resume reads like a greatest hits of conspiracy nonsense: Parkland and Santa Fe school shootings "staged", Parkland shooters magnetically aligned with ISIS, mail bomb attempts a "false flag", the Buffalo mass shooting dismissed as a Democratic hoax. Loomer ran for Congress in Florida—losing both times—but not before handcuffing herself to Twitter HQ in protest and jumping Nancy Pelosi's fence for grabbing headlines. Yet despite these circus acts, her influence has only grown under Trump, who praises her as a "very good patriot" and allows her to play loyalty enforcer from the shadows. This is no longer fringe behaviour; it is shaping policy with real consequences—including for the dying children fleeing war-ravaged Gaza. Misinformation with real consequences It all began when Loomer, once banned from X before Elon Musk's vanity purchase, took to the platform to spread conspiracy theories about a handful of Palestinian children who arrived in Houston and San Francisco for medical treatment. Loomer had decided that the sighs of relief of the badly-injured children were "jihadi chants" and claimed they were "doing the HAMAS terror whistle". "How is allowing for Islamic immigrants to come into the US America First policy?" she asked, going on to 'report' further Palestinian arrivals in Missouri and claiming that "several US Senators and members of Congress" had texted her to express their fury. Loomer also falsely claimed that she had "exclusively obtained" the clips she posted, but one was ripped off a medical aid charity's public Instagram account and the other was taken from the Houston Chronicle's YouTube channel. Loomer didn't stop there. She dived into the realm of fiction to claim that the injured children, including amputees arriving to get prosthetic legs, were "Islamic invaders from an Islamic terror hot zone", and demanded to know who in the State Department had "signed off" on their visas. "Is Rubio even aware of this?" Loomer wrote, in reference to the Secretary of State who was at that time in Alaska meeting Vladimir Putin. No MAGA post is complete without some fake statistic. In this one, Loomer claimed "95 per cent of Gazans voted for Hamas". That claim wasn't just wrong, it was laughably so—the kind of thing a two-second Google search could fix if only MAGA fanatics knew how to use anything beyond X and TruthSocial. Yet it was delivered with the blind confidence only found in the red-hat cult. In reality, Hamas won 44 per cent of the party list vote in the 2006 Palestinian legislative elections across Gaza and the West Bank, losing three of the five Gaza districts to the secular Fatah party. There has been no election since. But why let reality get in the way when MAGA rage will do the trick? Just like clockwork, Republican lawmakers piled on. Rep. Chip Roy of Texas promised to "inquire", while Rep. Randy Fine of Florida called the arrivals a "national security risk". And the State Department folded. It announced that it was stopping visas for "individuals from Gaza". "All visitor visas for individuals from Gaza are being stopped while we conduct a full and thorough review of the process and procedures used to issue a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas in recent days," the State Department said on its unofficial mouthpiece - its X handle. The language was cold, the tone distant - paperwork talk in the face of people fleeing bombardment, displacement, and starvation. An influence in Trump's orbit Loomer celebrated her win and pressed further, calling for all Gazans to be added to Trump's travel ban and declaring that "the US is not the world's hospital". More chilling than her success in denying basic rights through misinformation remains the influence she wields despite failing at basic fact-checking. She isn't just ranting into the void. Loomer has got several senior US security officials she deemed 'disloyal' to Trump dismissed. Loomer herself was quick to brag about it. "No other content creator or journalist has gotten as many Biden holdovers fired from the Trump admin!" she posted triumphantly on X. It was less a boast than a confession of just how dangerous her influence has become. In an interview to ABC News, Loomer proudly claimed, "I don't keep count anymore". "There's too many to keep track of," she said when asked how many officials she had helped force out. Rep. Fine publicly commended Loomer after the visa change was announced, in an acknowledgment of the part she had played in changing the visa policy. "Massive credit needs to be given to @LauraLoomer for uncovering this and making me and other officials aware. Well done, Laura," he wrote on X. 'Complicity with Israel's genocide' Outside the MAGA echo chamber, actual humans have expressed their horror. The Palestine Children's Relief Fund, which has evacuated thousands of kids for treatment over three decades, called the visa halt "dangerous and inhumane". "Medical evacuations are a lifeline for the children of Gaza who would otherwise face unimaginable suffering or death due to the collapse of medical infrastructure in Gaza," they stressed. The Council on Islamic-American Relations called it "intentional cruelty wrapped in President Trump's 'Israel First" agenda", and added that it was "deeply ironic" that the Trump administration was banning sick children while "rolling out the red carpet for racists and indicted war criminals from the Israeli government". "This ban is just the latest example of our government's complicity with Israel's genocide, which is increasingly rejected by the American people," it continued. Indeed, conditions in Gaza are catastrophic. Children being left to starve to death and people lining up for food aid at the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) are being shot down daily. Hospitals are collapsing, medicines are running out and even journalists aren't safe. The suffering is staggering. Just one snapshot. Of these 19 hospitals that remain in Gaza, just 12 provide a variety of health services; the rest are limited to basic emergency care. The supply crisis in these hospitals is real. 52 per cent of essential medicines and 68 per cent of consumables are at zero stock, while blood and plasma are in persistent shortage. Beyond the numbers on the screen is the cold reality, which is way more devastating. AMERICA FIRST! The Trump way This is not the first time the US under Donald Trump has slammed its doors on an entire population. In 2017, he signed an executive order barring people from several Muslim-majority countries and shutting out refugees. It was ban that was condemned as cruel, inhumane, and said to be in clear violation of international law. It came after he openly demanded a "total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States" during his first presidential campaign. Now, in his second administration, the policy has been resurrected, widened, and repackaged. A new proclamation bars entry to people from a dozen countries—primarily African and Middle Eastern. Once again, it dresses up naked discrimination as "security". In practice, it demonises the vulnerable: people fleeing torturers, warlords, dictators. It is not policy. It is a licence to discriminate. Gaza's last lifelines are collapsing. How much longer will it be before an 'America First', driven by the likes of Laura Loomer, regains its moral compass?