logo
ANZAC Day dawn services held across Australia

ANZAC Day dawn services held across Australia

SBS Australia24-04-2025

Listen to Australian and world news, and follow trending topics with .
TRANSCRIPT
Service and sacrifice remembered at Dawn Services across the country on ANZAC Day.
Ukraine's President reacts to sweeping Russian drone and missile strikes.
And in sport, the Broncos stun the Bulldogs on home turf in the NRL. Dawn Services are taking place across the country to mark ANZAC Day, 110 years after Australian and New Zealand troops landed at Gallipoli during World War I. In Canberra, Australian Defence Force Personnel have read excerpts from the letters and diaries of Australian who have experienced the realities of war firsthand. In the Sydney CBD, dignitaries joined veterans as the sun broke over Martin Place, and Parramatta in the city's west. In Melbourne members of the public are able to lay a poppy at the Shrine of Remembrance following the Dawn Service there before an Anzac Day march. Mick Bainbridge offered the Ode of Remembrance at a service in Canberra. "They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old: Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. We will remember them. Lest we forget." President Donald Trump renews his push for Ukraine-Russia peace talks after deadly missile strikes on Ukraine's capital Kyiv. At least 12 people have been killed and dozens injured in a Russian drone and missile attack on the capital Kyiv. The attacks triggered several fires as emergency services searched for people feared trapped beneath the rubble, in one of the biggest attacks on the city since the war began. After criticising the Russian attack in a social media post online, U-S President Donald Trump says he still believes in peace. REPORTER: "Do you still believe that Putin is serious about peace, given the events overnight in Ukraine? And if that bombing doesn't end, are you considering new sanctions on Russia? TRUMP: "So we are thinking that very strongly that they both want peace but they have to get to the table. We're waiting a long time. They have to them to the table and I think we're going to get peace. We want to save 5,000 young people." But Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says these latest attacks show Russia is not interested in peace. "This morning our country went through a new Russian attack on a very large scale, more than two hundred air targets. These are missiles, including ballistic and strike drones. In all regions of Ukraine, more than 80 people were injured by these strikes. Today, unfortunately, there are dead. In Kyiv, among the dead is a brother and a sister. The boy was 21 years old, the girl was 19. My condolences to all." The Democratic Republic of the Congo's government and the M23 rebel group have agreed to halt fighting in the east of the country while they work towards a permanent truce. In the surprise announcement, the two sides say they have agreed to work towards the conclusion of a truce in the conflict, which has seen the Rwandan-backed rebel group seize key cities in the violence-battered region. More than six truces and ceasefires have been agreed and then collapsed again since 2021. However, the latest statement says: Both parties reaffirm their commitment to an immediate cessation of hostilities. They say the truce will apply throughout the duration of the talks and until their conclusion.
----
Australian women who served as nurses in the Vietnam War have been honoured with a permanent memorial for the first time, more than 50 years after the war's end. A permanent photographic display at the Morven Historical Precinct in central Queensland, is a collection from the Australian War Memorial that captures the work and daily life of Australian nurses who tended soldiers in Vietnam. 353 Australian women served as nurses in Vietnam between 1964 and 1972. Curator of the Vietnam Nurses Memorial Annabelle Brayley says the role of women in wars is only recently starting to receive attention. "Most people don't know about them. I think most people are starting to learn about the World War I and World War II nurses in a way that they didn't before, and the Boer War and Crimea nurses. But the nurses who went to Vietnam have just flown completely under the radar."
----
The Canterbury Bulldogs have suffered their first loss of the season, losing 42 points to 18, to the Brisbane Broncos at Brisbane's Lang Park. The home side scored six tries in the first half despite heavy rain at times. Canterbury proved to be their own worst enemy, with three players sent to the sin bin. Adam Reynolds left the field for the Broncos after suffering to injuries to his shoulder. Canterbury coach Cameron Ciraldo says his team made too many mistakes in the first 40 minutes.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Aussies urged to charge ahead with household batteries
Aussies urged to charge ahead with household batteries

West Australian

time23 minutes ago

  • West Australian

Aussies urged to charge ahead with household batteries

Australia could slash $4 billion a year off power bills by the end of the decade if households embrace solar batteries in larger numbers, a report forecasts. The Climate Council issued the prediction on Tuesday, finding the savings were possible if half of all homes with solar panels installed added batteries by 2030. But progress could also get a bigger boost from allowing more electric vehicles to charge up the national grid, if solar battery prices continued to fall, and if all new households were designed for rooftop solar and battery systems, it found. The report comes amid heightened demand for home batteries after the announcement of a $2.3 billion federal government scheme to subsidise their purchase by 30 per cent from July. The Climate Council report, called Battery Boom, found about 300,000 (eight per cent) of the four million Australian households with solar panels used batteries to store energy. If that figure was lifted to reach two million homes by 2030 - half of those with rooftop solar panels currently installed - household energy bill savings could hit $4 billion a year. Electricity bill savings could rise from $1500 with solar panels to $2300 a year after installing a battery, Climate Council spokesman Greg Bourne said, although further support would be needed to help some families deal with the up-front cost. "Batteries haven't penetrated far enough into those four million (solar) households, but it makes a huge difference when you start picking up the sunshine from midday and time-shifting it to when high cost of electricity comes in," he told AAP. "It will start as word-of-mouth in the neighbourhood and talk of 'my bill's half of what it was' or 'my bills are a quarter of what they were because we put a battery in' and that's part of the education process." A typical household battery is expected to cover its cost within 8.3 years without the upcoming subsidy, the report found, down from 10 years in 2022. The Climate Council report also found big battery storage projects planned for Australia had doubled over the past year to reach 20 gigawatts, and the price of large energy storage had fallen by 20 per cent. On a state-by-state basis, Western Australia led the nation for the most big battery projects with eight installed, Victoria boasted the most community solar batteries, and the Northern Territory had the most homes with solar batteries installed at 15.9 per cent. Battery storage could also get a significant boost from compatible electric vehicles, Mr Bourne said, as more vehicle-to-grid chargers were standardised and sold in Australia. Other recommendations in the report to boost battery storage included adding rooftop solar and storage capacity to the National Construction Code, expanding support for community batteries, and strengthening on-shore battery recycling schemes.

Aussies urged to charge ahead with household batteries
Aussies urged to charge ahead with household batteries

Perth Now

time23 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

Aussies urged to charge ahead with household batteries

Australia could slash $4 billion a year off power bills by the end of the decade if households embrace solar batteries in larger numbers, a report forecasts. The Climate Council issued the prediction on Tuesday, finding the savings were possible if half of all homes with solar panels installed added batteries by 2030. But progress could also get a bigger boost from allowing more electric vehicles to charge up the national grid, if solar battery prices continued to fall, and if all new households were designed for rooftop solar and battery systems, it found. The report comes amid heightened demand for home batteries after the announcement of a $2.3 billion federal government scheme to subsidise their purchase by 30 per cent from July. The Climate Council report, called Battery Boom, found about 300,000 (eight per cent) of the four million Australian households with solar panels used batteries to store energy. If that figure was lifted to reach two million homes by 2030 - half of those with rooftop solar panels currently installed - household energy bill savings could hit $4 billion a year. Electricity bill savings could rise from $1500 with solar panels to $2300 a year after installing a battery, Climate Council spokesman Greg Bourne said, although further support would be needed to help some families deal with the up-front cost. "Batteries haven't penetrated far enough into those four million (solar) households, but it makes a huge difference when you start picking up the sunshine from midday and time-shifting it to when high cost of electricity comes in," he told AAP. "It will start as word-of-mouth in the neighbourhood and talk of 'my bill's half of what it was' or 'my bills are a quarter of what they were because we put a battery in' and that's part of the education process." A typical household battery is expected to cover its cost within 8.3 years without the upcoming subsidy, the report found, down from 10 years in 2022. The Climate Council report also found big battery storage projects planned for Australia had doubled over the past year to reach 20 gigawatts, and the price of large energy storage had fallen by 20 per cent. On a state-by-state basis, Western Australia led the nation for the most big battery projects with eight installed, Victoria boasted the most community solar batteries, and the Northern Territory had the most homes with solar batteries installed at 15.9 per cent. Battery storage could also get a significant boost from compatible electric vehicles, Mr Bourne said, as more vehicle-to-grid chargers were standardised and sold in Australia. Other recommendations in the report to boost battery storage included adding rooftop solar and storage capacity to the National Construction Code, expanding support for community batteries, and strengthening on-shore battery recycling schemes.

Albanese to lay out political vision for second term
Albanese to lay out political vision for second term

Perth Now

time23 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

Albanese to lay out political vision for second term

Anthony Albanese is set to lay out his second-term agenda in a key speech, as he prepares for potential talks with Donald Trump. In his first major address since an emphatic election win in May, the prime minister will speak at the National Press Club about his priorities for when parliament resumes in July. After securing an expanded mandate among voters at the election in which Labor increased its parliamentary majority, Mr Albanese will say delivering on promises will be his priority. "Delivering these commitments matters for every Australian, regardless of who they voted for. It matters for our economy, for the jobs, skills, technology, infrastructure and energy we need to grow and thrive in the years ahead," he will say in the speech. "It also matters for our democracy. We are living in a time of significant global uncertainty - and that reaches beyond just economic instability." May's federal poll was the first time since 1966 an incumbent government retained all the seats it held at an election. Mr Albanese will say promises of expanding urgent care clinics, cheaper childcare and an increase in affordable housing will remain central to his government's priorities. "Our government's vision and ambition for Australia's future was never dependent on the size of our majority. But you can only build for that future vision if you build confidence that you can deliver on urgent necessities," he will say. Labor will have a responsibility in its second term to disprove voter cynicism with governments, the prime minister will say. "To recognise that some of this frustration is drawn from people's real experience with government - be it failures of service delivery, or falling through the cracks of a particular system," he will say. "And to counter this, we have to offer the practical and positive alternative." The speech comes days before Mr Albanese flies to Canada for the G7 summit, where a one-on-one meeting with US President Donald Trump is on the cards. Tariffs imposed by Mr Trump on other countries are set to dominate discussions at the international forum, with Australia trying to carve out an exemption to the economic measure. Australia had been slapped with a 10 per cent tariff on all exports to the US, with steel and aluminium products having a 50 per cent tariff. Mr Albanese will say Australia will still be able to play a critical role in global affairs amid the instability. "Our vision is for a society that is a microcosm for the world, where all are respected and valued and our diversity is recognised as a strength," he will say. "Our international relationships in the fastest growing region of the world in human history benefit us, but also provide a platform for us to play a positive a stabilising global role in uncertain times."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store