
SBS News In Easy English 10 July 2025
The winner of the Djokovic-Sinner semi-final will play play either Carlos Alcaraz or Taylor Fritz in the final.
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ABC News
37 minutes ago
- ABC News
Government should be 'prepared to act' on Taiwan, Angus Taylor says
Shadow Defence Minister Angus Taylor is calling on the government to "make principled commitments to the security of Taiwan" amid pressure from the United States. "What I'm saying we should commit to, is a joint commitment to the security of Taiwan," he told 7.30. "Peace through deterrence is incredibly important ... That does mean you're prepared to act under certain circumstances." The Financial Times reported on Saturday that senior US defence official Elbridge Colby — who is leading the Trump administration's review of the AUKUS pact — was pressing Australia and Japan to say what role they would play if the US and China went to war over Taiwan. Mr Taylor said it was not possible to "codify how a conflict might unfold" but "you can make those principled commitments as part of an alliance". "That means working very closely in the Taiwan Strait to the security of Taiwan … and that commitment should underpin what we are doing in AUKUS." The calls come during Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's trip to China, where he is being hosted by President Xi Jinping. Mr Albanese said he was not asked by his Chinese counterpart about the increased pressure from the United States over Taiwan but that he reiterated the Australian position. "I reaffirmed on Taiwan the position of Australia of support for the status quo," he told reporters after his meeting. Speaking to the ABC on Sunday, Acting Defence Minister Pat Conroy said he would not "engage in hypotheticals" or "disclose confidential discussions". "The sole power to commit Australia to war or to allow our territory to be used for a conflict is the elected government of the day," he said. "That is our position. Sovereignty will always be prioritised, and that will continue to be our position." Mr Colby's review into the AUKUS pact was due to be completed within 30 days from when it started in June, though Mr Conroy said he was advised that it had been extended. Last month NATO allies unanimously agreed to lift their countries' defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP by 2035, after pressure from US President Donald Trump. US Defence Secretary Peter Hegseth has told Australia to increase defence spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP, though the government has resisted the call and plans to lift expenditure to 2.3 per cent. Mr Taylor again urged the government to heed the American call on defence spending and step up its commitments to the security of Taiwan. "These are the commitments that need to be made," he said. "They are not being made as far as we can see. If they are being made that's very quietly behind closed doors." Watch 7.30, Mondays to Thursdays 7:30pm on ABC iview and ABC TV Do you know more about this story? Get in touch with 7.30 here.


SBS Australia
38 minutes ago
- SBS Australia
Anthony Albanese talks trade and defence with China's leaders
Anthony Albanese talks trade and defence with China's leaders Published 15 July 2025, 8:52 am Australia has raised the Chinese live firing drills directly with Chinese President Xi Jinping in a critical high level meeting in Beijing. While Anthony Albanese said the contentious policy to return the Chinese leased port of Darwin was not raised in the hour-long meeting with the president, defence and security did feature. The lengthy engagement involved repeated reference to free and open trade, a veiled reference to Washington DC's tariffs, which are already affecting China's economic growth forecasts with flow on impacts for Australia.


SBS Australia
38 minutes ago
- SBS Australia
One third of Australia's young workers report wage theft
One third of Australia's young workers report wage theft Published 15 July 2025, 8:53 am A new report has found a third of young workers in Australia is being paid less than fifteen dollars an hour - almost ten dollars below the minimum hourly wage. The Melbourne Law School survey of 15- to 30-year-olds has identified widespread breaches of labour laws. Those from non-English speaking backgrounds are the worst treated in the workplace.