
Giant lines spotted outside Sydney pubs at 9am as Anzac Day commemorations kick off
Queues had formed from as early as 9am at venues like the Clovelley Hotel in the eastern suburbs and The Vic on the Park in Marrickville in the Inner West - where by midday police were not letting any more people line up.
Also in the early afternoon The Clock in Surrey Hills had a two hour line, Bellevue Hotel in Paddington had a three hour line, and both the Sackville in Balmain and Royal Paddington had huge queues, social media page Bondi Lines said.
Other pubs that still had long lines well after 12pm were the Cat and Fiddle in Balmain, The Glenmore at the Rocks, Harbord Hotel in Freshwater, and The Dolphin Hotel in Surrey Hills.
Some people said the lines were 'cooked' and they would be staying away, while others questioned whether the tone of the day as a memorial to those who died at war protecting the country was being forgotten.
'What does Anzac Day mean anymore?' one person asked.
'It's just been turned into another Australian drinking holiday,' another added.
Hundreds of thousands of Australians attended what has become the other great Anzac Day tradition of the dawn service.
Among them was Prime Minister Anthony Albanese who marked the day at the Australian War Memorial, while Opposition Leader Peter Dutton went to a commemoration in his electorate of Dickson in Brisbane.
The prime minister read a dedication at the Canberra service, saying the 25,000 who gathered before dawn ought to think of those who went to battle but did not come home.
'We wish to be worthy of their great sacrifice,' Mr Albanese said.
'Let us therefore once more dedicate ourselves to the ideals for which they died.
'As the dawn is even now about to pierce the night, so let their memory inspire us to work for the coming new light into the dark places of the world.'
The prime minister attended the service with his fiancee, Jodie Haydon.
The service was briefly interrupted by an attendee who yelled 'free Palestine' before the national anthem was played, with one heckler telling the protester to 'kick a landmine'.
For most of the service, it was only the sounds of bird calls emanating around the memorial that could be heard among the bugle calls and bagpipe laments.
It was important to take time out of the flurry of an election campaigning to honour Australia's defence forces, 110 years after the Gallipoli landings, Mr Albanese said.
'We contemplate the debt we owe them - those who finally came home, their hearts reshaped by all they had seen, and those who tragically never did,' Mr Albanese said.
Mr Dutton marked the day with a dawn service at Kallangur, in northern Brisbane, alongside his wife Kirilly.
Hundreds of people attended the service, where the opposition leader and his wife laid a wreath to commemorate the sacrifice made by Australian troops.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
20 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Why 'Albo the activist' has more in common with Liberal hero John Howard than he'd care to admit - and what it says about the future of Australia: PVO
Anthony Albanese is edging towards a paradox: a Labor PM who could end up echoing John Howard. Not in ideology, but in method. The shape of what's unfolding is familiar: govern from the centre, bank incremental gains and let time in office do the heavy lifting. But nobody could accuse either PM of failing to pursue passion projects, and not always successfully.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Chinese government lashes Australia's spy boss over warnings
China has accused Australian spies of operating in its country after the top Aussie spy boss accused Chinese spies of doing the same thing down under. China's Ministry of State Security hit back against ASIO director-general Mike Burgess' claim that Chinese citizens were spying in Australia. The statement was released by the Foreign Ministry's official WeChat account and accused Australian intelligence agencies of making groundless accusations. In July, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited China in an attempt to normalise relations with Beijing after several tense years. However, a speech by Mr Burgess on July 31, in which he named China among the top three countries engaged in espionage against Australia, unsettled relations once more." Mr Burgess said ASIO had disrupted 24 'major espionage and foreign interference' operations within the last three years alone. 'Nation states are spying at unprecedented levels, with unprecedented sophistication,' he said. 'ASIO is seeing more Australians targeted – more aggressively – than ever before.' China's Ministry of State Security accused Australia of painting itself as the 'victim' while its spies operated within the country. 'Australian intelligence agencies advocated the "serious threat" posed by foreign espionage activities to Australia, and even packaged themselves as innocent "victims" in groundless accusations of "Chinese espionage threat",' the ministry said. 'In recent years, China's state security organs have successively cracked a number of espionage cases against China instigated by Australian intelligence agencies in accordance with the law, effectively safeguarding China's sovereignty, security and development interests.' Mr Burgess put the cost of espionage - including the theft of intellectual property resulting in lost revenue and responding to incidents - at $12.5billion in 2023/24. This included cyber spies stealing nearly $2billion of trade secrets and intellectual property from Australian companies. In particular, foreign agents had been targeting AUKUS and military technology secrets, he told a crowd in South Australia. 'Hackers stealing commercially sensitive information from one Australian exporter gave a foreign country a leg up in a subsequent contract negotiation, 'costing Australia hundreds of millions of dollars', Mr Burgess said. The director-general also revealed details of multiple espionage operations as he warned officials, businesses and the general public about interference threats and the impact of lax security. Australian Federal Police charged a Chinese national with reckless foreign interference early in August. The woman was accused of being tasked by China to spy on a Canberra Buddhist group. She was arrested under the Counter Foreign Interference Taskforce and now faces a maximum penalty of 15 years' imprisonment. In 2022, Russian spies were deported after an ASIO investigation found they were recruiting proxies and agents to obtain sensitive information. 'You would be genuinely shocked by the number and names of countries trying to steal our secrets', Mr Burgess said. 'In this year's annual threat assessment, I called out these types of activities and put perpetrators on notice by stating, "we are watching, and we have zero tolerance". 'Anyone who thinks it is acceptable to monitor, intimidate and potentially repatriate members of our diaspora communities should never underestimate our capabilities and resolve.'


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Albanese clashes with Trump ambassador over Palestine decision
The Prime Minister has returned fire at a US diplomat, throwing his words back at him to defend Australia's recognition of Palestine. Australia on Monday revealed it would join other Western nations, including the UK, France and Canada, in recognising a state of Palestine at the United Nations General Assembly in September, in response to the worsening humanitarian crisis in Gaza. But Anthony Albanese backed Australia's decision, saying the continued human suffering in Gaza had disgusted the nation. '(Mike Huckabee) is an ambassador of a country - not Australia - to another country,' he told ABC Radio on Friday. 'My job is to represent Australia's interest and Australians have been disgusted by what they see on their TV every night. 'When you have children starving, when you have children losing their lives with families queuing for food and water, that provokes - not surprisingly - a human reaction.' Mr Huckabee also criticised the timing of the statehood announcement. 'What Australia and the other countries may have done inadvertently is to push Israel towards doing exactly what they're afraid of,' he told ABC's 7.30 program on Thursday night. 'The result of this has been to completely halt any type of thoughtful negotiations going forward.' Almost 150 out of the 193 UN member states already recognise the state of Palestine. While the ambassador said the US got 'no heads up' about Australia's decision, Foreign Minister Penny Wong did inform US Secretary of State Marco Rubio ahead of it being made public. Mr Albanese also spoke in advance with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a tense phone call. Liberal senator Jane Hume claimed Americans on both sides of politics had been shocked by Australia's decision on statehood. 'This decision by the Labor government has bewildered the Americans, that (the government) essentially departed from years of a strong alliance between Israel and America and Australia to make this decision unilaterally,' she told Seven's Sunrise. The Coalition has pledged to reverse Australia's position if it wins the next election. Australia's decision to recognise a Palestinian state was fuelled in part by Israel's newly unveiled plans to occupy Gaza City and came after at least 90,000 people marched across the Sydney Harbour Bridge in support of Palestine. 'There have been tens of thousands of people suggesting this is not the way forward. You just can't continue with the same pattern without an endpoint,' Mr Albanese said. 'The endpoint has to be to isolate Hamas.' The conditions for Australia's recognition include assurances that the designated terrorist group Hamas, which controls Gaza, plays no role in a future state. Many within the pro-Palestine movement say recognition will do nothing to change the situation on the ground, urging the government to go further and impose sanctions on Israel. Israel's campaign in Gaza has killed almost 62,000 Palestinians, including 18,000 children, since October 7, 2023, according to local health authorities. It began after Hamas's invasion on October 7, 2023, when it killed more than 1200 Israelis and took about 250 people hostage. Not all of the hostages have been released.