logo
‘Beacon to us still': PM honours WWII heroes

‘Beacon to us still': PM honours WWII heroes

Perth Nowa day ago
Anthony Albanese has spoken of the debt the country owes to those who served the nation in a speech on the 80th anniversary of the World War II victory in the Pacific.
Japan unconditionally surrendered on August 15, 1945, the message making its way to Australia via the broadcast of a code word: Neon.
The Daily Telegraph reported 'Neon' was the perfect combination of a short word, few Morse code signals and easily understood.
After dispatching the message of Japan's surrender from London to Canberra, the paper reported, High Commissioner Stanley Bruce went out for a 'much-needed drink'. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Opposition Leader Sussan Ley attended the 80th Victory in the Pacific Day commemoration at Martin Place on Friday. NewsWire / Nikki Short Credit: News Corp Australia
Mr Albanese, speaking at Sydney's Cenotaph, paid tribute to veterans and those who fell in conflict.
'Part of the debt that we owe to all who served our nation is to remind ourselves how close history came to taking a very different path, and to remember and honour every Australian – and every friend and every ally – who gave everything to ensure that it did not,' Mr Albanese said.
'We think of all the stories of courage. Of resilience and exhaustion, of fear and elation, and an endless longing for the home that so many never saw again.
'These are not stories rendered in bronze or marble, but written in flesh and blood.' Anthony Albanese paid tribute to WWII veterans at the 80th Victory in the Pacific Day commemoration at Martin Place on Friday. NewsWire / Nikki Short Credit: News Corp Australia
Mr Albanese added the 'nightmares made real' of the war was a weight, but that Australians stood against 'human beings in a grotesque perversion of humanity' lifted hearts.
'Amid the shadows of war, the power of their courage and the strength of their character is a light that is a beacon to us still.
'They showed us what it is to remain true to ourselves, no matter what.
'They showed us what it means to stand shoulder to shoulder with friends and allies. And together, they turned the tide.' Shadow Minister for Defence, Angus Taylor said Victory in the Pacific showed Australia could play a role on the world stage. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia
'Fear was real'
The surrender of Japan came days after the US dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing thousands.
News of the surrender, and the end of the war, came at 8.44am with then Prime Minister Ben Chifley starting a speech less than an hour later: 'Fellow citizens, the war is over.'
The formal surrender of Japan took place on 2 September.
Opposition defence spokesman Angus Taylor said victory in the Pacific showed Australia 'could play a pivotal role on the world stage'.
'In those early days of 1942, fear was real,' he said.
'A full-scale Japanese invasion was not just imagined, it was planned for. Australians dug trenches, volunteered for civil defence, and braced for the worst.
'But over the course of the war, our servicemen and women stood firm.
'Victory in the Pacific was not just a military triumph. It was a national achievement.
'It proved that even as a small nation, we could play a pivotal role on the world stage.
Australia did not choose this conflict.
'But when the threat came to our shores, we met it with determination and resolve. We stood with our allies, and we did so not out of obligation, but out of conviction.
'Today, we reflect on the legacy of those who served in the Pacific and recommit to the values they defended.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

7NEWS The Issue: Why Trump's latest veiled threat could spell trouble for the pride of Australia
7NEWS The Issue: Why Trump's latest veiled threat could spell trouble for the pride of Australia

7NEWS

time10 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

7NEWS The Issue: Why Trump's latest veiled threat could spell trouble for the pride of Australia

It was a telling measure of the value Australians put in the country's 77-year-old Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. In mid March, as the Albanese government looked for an issue to give it impetus for a soon-to-be-called election, it turned to the PBS; loved in Australia - and loathed by Pharmaceutical makers abroad - for delivering medicines at little more than one quarter the cost paid by Americans. Prime Minister Albanese announced, if reelected, he'd reduce the scheme's cap on prescriptions, from $31.60 to just $25. Opposition leader Peter Dutton immediately backed the plan. 'We support affordable medicines,' he told radio 2GB. On complaints from US pharmaceutical companies about the PBS, the Prime Minister seized on the chance for a fight. The PBS, he said was 'a monument to the fairness at the heart of Australian life and we don't negotiate our values.' The PBS is political gold. Supporting it is a 'no brainer' for a federal politician. Yet, five months on that threat from the US, has only intensified and it may yet test Australia's love for the scheme. For President Donald Trump, high prescription drug costs in America have become a cause. Loading content... Last month, the White House announced the President had written to 17 drug company CEOs demanding guarantees 'they will not offer other developed nations better prices for new drugs than prices offered in the United States.' According to a Trump White House fact sheet, 'Americans are subsidising drug-manufacturer profits and foreign health systems.' The statement did not mention Australia's PBS, but if the White House staff had wanted an example, it would have been an obvious candidate. 'The PBS is a cornerstone of our Medicare system' according to Medicines Australia CEO, Liz de Somer, though that's where her applause for the scheme ends. Medicines Australia is the industry body representing many of the same pharmaceutical giants now targeted by the Trump White House. According to Liz de Somer 'we're lagging behind other countries in the time it takes to make new medicines available on the PBS.' 'We are now taking an average of 466 days for a new innovative medicine to be listed on the PBS, and that's after it's already been deemed safe and effective by the Therapeutic Goods Administration.' 'We know these drugs are safe, we know they're effective, but the government has not yet decided to purchase them and make them subsidised for patients. They take too long.' Medicines Australia wants the 466 days average drug listing time, reduced dramatically - to just sixty days. That would likely mean dramatically reducing the time taken by the government and companies to negotiate a price for their medicines. The end result could easily be a bigger bill for the Australian taxpayer. Currently, the PBS costs about $14 billion a year to run. Of course, there is a human cost to delaying approval for medicines. Medicines Australia points to the 'many, many cancer medicines that are not available for patients' in Australia. According to Liz de Somer: 'We are getting one in four innovations listed on our PBS at the moment. That's not good enough.' 'We know that people are waiting for these medicines. We know that they can see they're available in other countries, and they don't understand why they're not made available here.' There is an obvious profit motive for pharmaceutical companies in getting listed sooner and selling their product more quickly, but delays in the system have a human cost. The Albanese government is currently considering recommendations to reform the scheme including measures designed to speed the process.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers flag approvals changes in environmental laws
Treasurer Jim Chalmers flag approvals changes in environmental laws

Sky News AU

time12 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Treasurer Jim Chalmers flag approvals changes in environmental laws

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says Australians are 'burning cash' waiting for approvals as he takes aim at Australia's sluggish productivity rate ahead of a three-day talkfest in Canberra. Chalmers will next week host an economic reform roundtable in Canberra where boosting productivity and building resilience in Australia's economy and budget will take centre-stage. Speaking with The Guardian, Mr Chalmers said slow approval times by governments and councils had stymied productivity. 'It will be one of the main ways that people think through our regulatory challenges and our challenges around the time it takes to get projects approved,' Chalmers told the Guardian. 'In all the consultation I've been doing – in housing, renewable energy projects – there are too many instances where people are burning cash waiting for approvals to build things that we desperately want people to build.' The treasurer's remarks signal reform to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act is a high priority for the re-elected government. The Albanese government failed to deliver on its promise of reform the country's complex environmental laws its first term. Separately, Mr Chalmers told NewsWire on Friday that Australia's sluggish birthrate meant the country would have to lift productivity to maintain living standards. 'It's not surprising that the birthrate has slowed given the pressures on people, including financial pressures,' he said. 'We want to make it easier for them to make that choice. If they want to have more kids, we want to make it easier for them to do that, and that's what motivates a lot of our changes.' As Australia struggles to boost the economy, and in turn raise wages and living standards, it's contending with a sluggish birthrate of 1.5 births per woman, which is under the 2.1 figure needed to sustain population growth. Boosting productivity will be essential to ensuring that Australia's ageing population can weather economic headwinds, the Treasurer said. 'Now, the reason why the productivity challenge is important to this is because our society is ageing, and over time, there will be fewer workers for every person who's retired,' he said. 'We need to make sure that our economy is as productive as it can be, as strong as it can be to withstand that demographic change, which is going to be big and consequential.' Originally published as Treasurer Jim Chalmers says too many Aussies are 'burning cash' waiting for approvals

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store