Natasha May
Vietnam veteran Gware Green does not look forward to Anzac Day.
“It brings back all the bad memories, all of your friends that didn’t come back in one piece,” he says.
Green was one of 11 schoolmates from Gilgandra who served in Vietnam. Only 10 came back.
Green’s close friend Michael Noonan was 21 when he died in Vietnam. He and Green were in the same battalion, but served in different companies. “I was almost alongside of him but didn’t know until two days later.”
Green didn’t return to Gilgandra until 10 years after the war because “it was very hard to front Michael’s mother”.
On Monday, Green stood at the front of the dawn service in Armatree, a western NSW town of 150. He was joined by an Afghanistan veteran as well as those who still farm the land their fathers and grandfathers were given as soldier settler blocks.
At dawn, a small crowd gathered in the tiny town to remember their service, as soldiers and settlers, to carve out a place in the community’s history.
Read more of this dispatch from Natasha May, Guardian Australia’s rural network reporter, with pictures from Mike Bowers:
Since @JoshFrydenberg pulled out of the ACTUAL Kooyong candidates forum, I’d relish the opportunity to debate him on Ch9.
If it’s in Kooyong (not Docklands!), in front of people of Kooyong, with Qs asked by the people of #Kooyong.
That’s why I’m running — to represent Kooyong! https://t.co/EXK6e0fbaK
— Dr Monique Ryan (@Mon4Kooyong) April 25, 2022
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 1 Paul Karp](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/uploads/2017/10/09/Paul-Karp%2C-L.png?w=847&ssl=1)
Paul Karp
Labor has hit back at Peter Dutton’s claim that the only way to “preserve peace is to prepare for war”, suggesting the Coalition’s actions fall short of its words.
The defence minister made the comments on Anzac Day morning, warning that “people like Hitler” are not “consigned to history” and Australia must do more to stand up to China’s aggression in the region.
China’s security agreement with Solomon Islands has injected national security as a central issue of the federal election campaign, with Labor declaring it the worst foreign policy failure since the second world war.
On Monday, Scott Morrison said that Australia shares the same “red line” as the US and that a Chinese base in the south Pacific would be unacceptable, but did not spell out what Australia would do if this occurred.
Dutton told Channel Nine’s Today program the comments reflect “the reality of our time”, and the past sacrifices of the Anzacs in conflicts will not “see us through to eternity without conflict in our region”.
Dutton said:
We have to be realistic that people like Hitler and others aren’t just a figment of our imagination or that they’re consigned to history … We’re in a period very similar to the 1930s now and I think there were a lot of people in the 1930s who wish they had spoken up much earlier into the decade.
Labor’s deputy leader, Richard Marles, responded that “we certainly need to prepare, but we have not seen the preparation under this government”.
Marles said:
Words are one thing, action is another … This is a government which beats its chest.
When it comes to actually delivering, and doing what needs to be done, it’s a government which repeatedly fails.
Read more:
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 2 Katharine Murphy](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/uploads/2017/10/06/Katharine-Murphy%2C-R.png?w=847&ssl=1)
Katharine Murphy
Scott Morrison has told the UN that Australia will reach net zero emissions by 2050 – but according to the Coalition’s candidate in Flynn, this commitment is a flexible, non-binding plan that leaves plenty of “wiggle room”.
Colin Boyce, who has previously been on the record opposing the government’s net zero target, even though it is National party policy, on Monday suggested the government’s net zero plan may not happen because of the uncertain geopolitical climate.
“Zero net carbon emissions by 2050, Morrison’s document, is a flexible plan that leaves us wiggle room as we proceed into the future,” Boyce told the ABC. “We’ve seen the world change significantly in the last three months in terms of the use of fossil fuels, all in relation to the geopolitical situation in Europe”.
Boyce also noted Morrison’s net zero “statement” last year was “not binding, there will be no legislation attached to it”. The LNP’s Flynn candidate said it had been made clear on page 81 of the government’s transition plan that the future of gas and coal would ultimately be determined by international demand.
In Australia’s nationally determined contribution submitted to the UN last October, the Morrison government said: “Australia adopts a target of net zero emissions by 2050. This is an economy-wide target, covering all sectors and gases included in Australia’s national inventory.”
Read more:
Josh Butler
Federal police have arrested and charged a man who allegedly yelled abuse at the deputy prime minister, Barnaby Joyce, on a rural highway last week.
News Corp reported that Joyce had been travelling between Tamworth and Armidale on Friday, when he pulled off the road to make a call. A passing car was said to have stopped 40 metres away, with the driver allegedly getting out and yelling at Joyce.
The deputy PM’s federal police detail prevented the man from coming closer, but the man is reported to have directed explicit criticisms at Joyce.
On Monday, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said a man had been arrested over the incident. In a statement, the AFP said:
The 52-year-old man was refused police bail and is expected to appear in Tamworth local court today (Monday, 25 April 2022), after police charged him yesterday with threatening to cause harm to a commonwealth public official and failure to comply with bail conditions,
Police will allege the man verbally threatened an AFP officer and adopted a fighting stance during Friday’s incident.
The arrest was made by operation wilmot, a special AFP taskforce set up to “ensure the security of high-office holders and parliamentarians during the 2022 federal election” in conjunction with the electoral commission.
AFP detective acting superintendent Jeremy Staunton said:
The AFP supports political expression and freedom of speech. However, when it leads to disruption, harassment, intimidation, threatening behaviour and damage to property, it can reach the threshold of a criminal offence.
Politicians, candidates and the people who work with them should be able to do their jobs safely and we will not tolerate criminal behaviour.
The charge of threatening to cause harm to a commonwealth public official carries a maximum penalty of five years’ jail, the AFP said.
South Australia records six Covid deaths, 3,175 new cases
In South Australia six people have died with Covid and 3,175 new cases have been recorded in the state’s daily figures reported on Monday.
.@9NewsMelb has offered to host a debate between @JoshFrydenberg and Dr Monique Ryan @Mon4Kooyong at its studios in Melbourne’s Docklands at 3pm on Thursday. The Treasurer has agreed. Dr Ryan’s camp will not commit. The offer will remain open until Thursday. #auspol
— Chris Uhlmann (@CUhlmann) April 25, 2022
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 3 Josh Taylor](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/uploads/2019/08/06/Josh_Taylor.png?w=847&ssl=1)
Josh Taylor
On Friday the Australian Electoral Commission announced it had referred former One Nation and independent senator Rod Culleton to the Australian federal police for allegedly making a false declaration when nominating for the upcoming election.
The AEC said Culleton had ticked the box stating he was not an undischarged bankrupt or insolvent, but he is listed as an undischarged bankrupt on the national personal insolvency index.
It’s the second time such a referral has happened, with the AEC referring Culleton to the AFP for the same issue in 2019.
Guardian Australia has confirmed that there wasn’t enough evidence at the time for the investigation to proceed.
Culleton’s name appeared on the index in 2019, too, so it is unclear whether this new referral will be different to the last one.
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 4 Michael McGowan](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/uploads/2019/01/14/Michael_McGowan.png?w=847&ssl=1)
Michael McGowan
New South Wales police say they are not aware of any threats made against the Liberal party’s controversial candidate in Warringah, Katherine Deves, after an interview in which she said she had received “death threats” over comments about transgender people that she made online.
After weeks of avoiding media scrutiny, Deves gave an interview to SBS on Sunday night in which she said her family had fled Sydney amid fears for their safety:
I have received death threats, I have had to have the police and the AFP involved. My safety has been threatened. My family are away out of Sydney because I don’t want them to witness what I’m going through nor do I want their safety put at risk.
Deves has become a lightning rod for criticism after her comments about transgender people on her personal website and now-deleted Twitter page resurfaced during the election campaign.
But despite saying she had been forced to involve the police after receiving “death threats”, a spokesperson for the NSW police said in a brief statement that the force had not been made aware of any threats:
The NSW Police Force have not received any reports of threats made.
In a statement, the AFP said it “does not comment on matters that may be the subject of investigation”.
And with that, I will hand the blog over to my esteemed colleague, Elias Visontay. Many thanks for reading.
And here are some photos from Sydney:
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 5 A pipe band at the Anzac Day march in Sydney](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/media/70f7ba07365f6d3810d4672fa41c64f4391c81cc/0_427_7987_4795/master/7987.jpg?resize=847.5%2C509&ssl=1)
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 6 Veterans in wheelchairs take part](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/media/ecb33cc415152a2a56110c375dfd69e7679541d1/0_0_5000_3002/master/5000.jpg?resize=847.5%2C509&ssl=1)
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 7 Australians and New Zealanders commemorate the day](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/media/59f3586308265f712cd5929fc27f5e640537015d/0_115_3500_2101/master/3500.jpg?resize=847.5%2C509&ssl=1)
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 8 A youth marching band](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/media/02a929be86aafaeab8f09c00eb9dd6df3f93ff7d/0_574_8640_5184/master/8640.jpg?resize=847.5%2C509&ssl=1)
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 9 A woman holds up a thank you sign](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/media/376c7397f067e6490f184e68eb6a82fa3b7b5402/0_164_8088_4853/master/8088.jpg?resize=847.5%2C509&ssl=1)
ABC reviewing Fauziah Ibrahim’s social media activity
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 10 Amanda Meade](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/uploads/2019/05/28/Amanda_Meade.png?w=847&ssl=1)
Amanda Meade
The ABC has confirmed Weekend Breakfast co-host Fauziah Ibrahim has taken a break from presenting while her social media activity is under review.
An ABC News spokesperson told Guardian Australia:
The ABC is reviewing recent social media activity by presenter Fauziah Ibrahim, who has taken a break from on-camera duties but remains part of the Weekend Breakfast team.
The contentious issue is Ibrahim’s Twitter lists which included “Labor Trolls” and “Lobotomised Shitheads”. She has deleted the lists and made her Twitter account private.
Last year ABC managing director David Anderson warned staff they face disciplinary action, including the sack, if they breach tough new social media guidelines.
The warning came after two of the ABC’s most experienced journalists, Sally Neighbour and Laura Tingle, fell foul of the rules for Twitter use which prohibit bringing the ABC into disrepute with personal views.
Anderson said journalists on Twitter are required to be “conscious of your responsibility to protect the ABC’s reputation, independence and integrity where your personal use of social media intersects with your professional life”:
Working at the ABC offers tremendous opportunities. It also comes with responsibilities – more than at any other media organisation in Australia.
The ABC’s crackdown follows moves by the BBC to crackdown on social media posts which could indicate a personal political view.
Queensland reports 4,639 new cases and two deaths
Queensland is reporting 4,639 new cases overnight and two deaths:
![Australia live news updates: Anzac Day commemorated; ABC reviewing presenter’s social media activity; 16 Covid deaths 11 Caitlin Cassidy](https://i0.wp.com/i.guim.co.uk/img/uploads/2022/04/21/Caitlin_Cassidy%2C_L.png?w=847&ssl=1)
Caitlin Cassidy
Green Music Australia and Music Declares Emergency have launched their “No Music on a Dead Planet” campaign in the lead-up to the federal election.
The campaign is calling on musicians and workers in the arts to lobby for greater climate action from the government, by declaring music “at risk of extinction”:
Like plants and animals, music is at risk of extinction if we fail to act and meet the current climate emergency. To highlight the urgency, musicians are declaring songs to be endangered or extinct until we take action as a community.
A number of high-profile musicians and bands have joined the campaign, including Something for Kate, Pinch Points and the Yorta Yorta artist Drmngnow.
“I SAW MY PM ON THE TELLY BUT I DIDN’T HEAR A SOUND,” Melbourne punk band Pinch Points posted on social media:
We wrote this lyric on Virga about Scomo and the liberal government’s piss-poor response to the black summer bushfires, but it could just as easily refer to their action in the recent flood crisis or any environmental issue throughout his time in government.
We’re about to have a federal election here in so-called Australia and we need our leaders to be doing whole lot better on the climate front.