Bruce Lehrmann's lawyer request to adjourn denied
Hashtags

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


SBS Australia
14 minutes ago
- SBS Australia
Security camera set for childcare centres
Security cameras are set to be trialled at 300 childcare centres across Australia, in response to the safety crisis that has hit the industry. Education ministers from around the country have met in Sydney today to try and put in place solutions, after several cases of alleged child abuse in childcare centres. Some centres will be made to install security cameras, whilst others can volunteer to do so. Cameras can be put in everywhere in a centre except toilets and change areas. The federal government is proposing to put in 189 million dollars for various improvements, and wants a national childcare worker register. Federal Education Minister Jason Clare says all levels of government need to work together to effectively protect children. "We only get this done if we work together, if we all step up. The Australian government's got to step up. The states and territories have got to step up. Regulators have got to step up." Australia has joined allies in rebuking Israel over its plan to build illegal settlements in the West Bank, as the diplomatic stoush between the two nations deepens. Foreign Minister Penny Wong has released a joint statement - alongside her counterparts from 20 countries, including Canada, Italy, Japan and the UK - calling on Israel to immediately reverse its decision to construct 3400 homes in the E-1 area east of Jerusalem. The plan, devised by Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, would effectively cut the Palestinian-controlled West Bank in two. The joint statement said that the plan will undermine security, and fuel further violence and instability, as well as making a two-state solution impossible by dividing any Palestinian state and restricting Palestinian access to Jerusalem. A postal worker has been charged after allegedly stealing bank cards from the mail in a number of Sydney suburbs before handing them off to criminal syndicates in a scheme worth nearly $1.5 million. Police raided the homes of the 56-year-old postie and two other men, aged 35 and 27, in southern Sydney where they found the stolen goods. These included Australian and US cash totalling more than $14,000, a Rolex watch, Louis Vuitton handbags, a taser, electronic items and cartons of cigarettes. Detectives from Strike Force Rubi with help from Australia Post investigated the postal employee who rifled through the mail in Edgecliff, Woollahra and Double Bay in Sydney's eastern suburbs. They allege he supplied the stolen bank cards to two separate organised crime syndicates. Weather conditions in New South Wales are clearing up after a long spell of heavy rain leading to flash flooding, with emergency crews responding to 10 rescues. The NSW State Emergency Service [[S-E-S]] has been dispatched to nearly 630 incidents across the state in the last 24 hours, including 10 flood rescues. There are 42 warnings in place for residents across the impacted areas from Wollongong to Goondiwindi. Angus Hines from the Bureau of Meteorology says people in Northern New South Wales especially should keep up to date with flood warnings. "We maintain the risk of minor or moderate flooding for large parts of Northern NSW as well so if you do live along Northern or North-Eastern parts of the state definitely stay up to date with the latest weather, flood watches and warnings." More than 356mm of rain has fallen in three weeks in Sydney's CBD, closing in on the city's all-time August record of 482mm, set in 1998. Six people have died at a dairy in the U-S state of Colorado from what appears to be an accident involving exposure to gas in a confined space. The people killed in the incident, which happened around 55 kilometres north-east of the state capital, Denver, are all Hispanic males. Autopsies are yet to take place, as authorities try to find out exactly what gas was involved. At least 18 people are dead and more than 40 injured in Colombia after two attacks by different dissident factions of the former rebel group known as FARC. In one attack, a vehicle exploded in the country's third-largetst city, Cali, killing six people. In the other, twelve police officers were killed when a police helicopter was shot down while participating in a coca leaf crop eradication operation in Antioquia, which is in the country's central northwest. More than 450,000 people died in the long-running conflict between the FARC rebels and the Colombia government that ended with a 2016 peace agreement. These attacks are being blamed on groups of FARC members who reject that agreement. Passionate performers have competed in Finland for the qualifying round of this year's Air Guitar World Championships. The competition in it's 28th year reaches its climax with the final on Friday evening local time bringing together competitors from 13 countries. Contestants are judged on the performance of two songs in two separate rounds, each lasting 60 seconds and real instruments are off-limits. The challengers include U-S champion Saladin 'Six String Sal' Thomas and German champion Patrick 'Van Airhoven' Culek. The winner is chosen by a five-member jury of performing arts professionals. In rugby union, Olympian Corey Toole has been picked to make his debut for the Wallabies in this weekend's Rugby Championship match against South Africa in Cape Town. Toole played rugby sevens for Australia at the Paris Olympics last year. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt says the winger has adapted well to the more physical fifteen-man game. "You've got to become pretty proficient around the contact area. And Corey has worked really hard at that. He's got better and better contesting ball in the air." Toole replaces Dylan Pietsch, who broke his jaw in last weekend's game. Fraser McReight will captain the side in place of Harry Wilson. Meanwhile, Australia's women's team, the Wallaroos, have announced their lineup to play Samoa in the opening game of the World Cup in England tomorrow night Caitlyn Halse has been named at fullback, and at 18 years of age, will become the youngest woman to ever play for Australia at a World Cup.


SBS Australia
31 minutes ago
- SBS Australia
SBS News in Filipino, Friday 22 August 2025
Mandatory child safety training and a national register of carers will be on the agenda when Australia's education ministers gather for a crucial meeting today. Business groups have urged the federal government to follow through on crucial reforms brought up during its productivity roundtable. Indigenous community groups have raised concerns about the roll-out of the Northern Territory government's 12-month pepper spray trial. LISTEN TO SBS Filipino 08:03 Filipino 📢 Where to Catch SBS Filipino

ABC News
44 minutes ago
- ABC News
Offshore wind company pulls out of $10 billion Hunter project
The future of the offshore wind industry in New South Wales has been dealt a blow after a European energy giant confirmed it was pulling out of the most advanced project in the state. The federal government had offered a feasibility licence to a consortium involving Norwegian energy company Equinor and Australian partner Oceanex to build the Novocastrian Offshore Wind Farm off Newcastle and Port Stephen. Equinor said it would not be accepting the licence, and would withdraw its support for the project. The $10 billion farm was expected to generate 2,000 megawatts of capacity and be located 20 kilometres off the coastline. Oceanex announced the plan for the project in 2020, with the federal government granting the feasibility license in February. The project included the use of floating foundation technology in a 500 kilometre square licence area, and was expected to create more than 3,000 jobs during construction. Energy Minister Chris Bowen told ABC Radio Newcastle the two partners could not agree to move forward with the project. He said Oceanex was too small to lead the project alone. "They need a partner, and frankly an international partner," he said. In a statement, Oceanex said it is disappointed with Equinor's decision. "We will continue to work with all to investigate how we can make offshore wind in the Hunter progress and create huge jobs and investment for the region," the statement read. The decision came months after the collapse of the only company pursuing a project in the other NSW offshore wind zone, in the Illawarra region. In a joint statement, the Novocastrian Offshore Wind project said the decision reflected global challenges. "While we are not progressing with this feasibility license, we believe Australia continues to have a significant role to play in the global energy transition," the statement read. Equinor's move came after a decision by the company to pull out of a planned wind farm in Bass Strait earlier this year. Meanwhile, the federal government has continued supporting renewable technology development by releasing new guidance for research licenses in declared offshore zones. MP for Paterson, Meryl Swanson, said while she was disappointed Equinor declined the license, more research would be a step in a positive direction. "We're not shutting the door on more jobs and energy, we're pursuing it," Ms Swanson said. Port Stephens Offshore Game Fishing Club president Troy Radford led a fight against the proposed wind farm. "It's great news for tourists, whale watchers and fishermen," Mr Radford said. "The impact to recreational game fishing would be devastating, the area he chose is a marlin hotspot in Australia. Mr Radford said the federal government should deregister the zone altogether. "The zone that Mr Bowen picked out off Port Stephens is the worst possible spot," he said.