Queensland Police
(Image: Supplied)

MANHUNT ON THE GOLD COAST

A manhunt is currently underway after Gold Coast police found the body of a teenage girl in a ute near a mobile home park. 

The Courier-Mail ($) reports that police are searching for a suspect in a silver late-model Holden Commodore sedan with registration 966WKB, after they investigated a missing person’s call only for a man to flee as they arrived. Police say the man should not be approached; if you see the car call 000.

The news comes less than a fortnight after public vigils mourning Melbourne’s Eurydice Dixon, Sydney’s Qi Yu, and other victims of gender-based violence.

INDIGENOUS PLAYERS SPEAK OUT

A study of Indigenous AFL players has found substantial criticisms in how the league supports players both during and after their careers. 

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that a study on behalf of Indigenous Past Player Group has engaged in rigorous interviews with 25 former players, whose careers date back as far as retirement in 1996. While players detailed both their positive and negative experiences, criticisms centred on racist jokes, a lack of support for retired players, and failing to create intercultural awareness.

ON THE SUNNY SIDE

Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore has launched the city’s first combined solar and large-scale battery installation, the Alexandra Canal transport depot, as part of her plan to source half the city’s power from renewable energy.

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that Moore opened the 1600 solar panel-strong project yesterday. While relatively small when compared to Sydney Markets’ nearly 8600 solar panels, it is the first to be supported by a 500-kilowatt hour battery. In other news, the Coalition last night supported Senator Pauline Hanson‘s (ultimately defeated) motion for new coal-fired power stations.

[free_worm]

THEY REALLY SAID THAT?

Luke Gosling: In the lead-up to Territory Day, we Territorians have a message for the Commonwealth, and it’s in the words of Meatloaf. It is, [starts singing] we want you, we need you, but there ain’t no way we’re ever going to give up [stops singing] for full rights of the Northern Territory. But don’t be sad [goes back to singing] because two out of three ain’t bad.
Deputy Speaker: [laughing] I unfortunately do have to stop the Member there, and must say some decisions still need to be questioned.

Luke Gosling

Rocking a safari suit, the Federal Member for Solomon, Darwin honours the 40th anniversary of the Northern Territory’s self-governance the only way anyone really can: via Meatloaf.

CRIKEY QUICKIE: THE BEST OF YESTERDAY

“Some days after Crikey first pointed out that, unlike his predecessor Donald McDonald, ABC chairman Justin Milne was signally absent from the debate around the ABC, he made a rather tepid foray into the controversy with an op-ed about how trusted the ABC was and how the commercial media had an agenda to undermine it. And last week, managing director Michelle Guthrie gave a speech also defending the national broadcaster. Guthrie emphasised the ABC’s efficiency and economic benefits.”

“On June 20, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order bringing to an end the practice of separating undocumented migrants from their children on the US-Mexico border and announced, with typical precision and accuracy, ‘It’s been going on for 60 years. 60 years. Nobody has taken care of it. Nobody has had the political courage to take care of it. But we’re going to take care of it.’”

“Take one look at the upcoming legislative agenda of the Turnbull government and you’d be excused for assuming that our antipodean democracy was a police state under threat from many faceless foreign nations. Supposed espionage threats and foreign interference claims are being used to ram through laws that will have a huge impact on civil society, as well as changes to security regulations that will allow police to demand identification at airports without due cause, and intimidation tactics directed at citizens who dare to criticise government services.”

READ ALL ABOUT IT

NT euthanasia laws back on the table ($)

Gabrielle Upton contradicts federal advice on ban of PFAS chemicals

Former inmate claims juvenile wing of adult prison was a house of horrors

Cafe Society: Governor Edu-Kate’s mission to fix Tasmania’s schooling system ($)

Flu vaccine shortage hits children and the elderly

Adelaide’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital to get back its 24/7 cardiac services ($)

‘A litany of failures’: report takes aim at government IT projects

Bill Shorten under pressure amid small business tax backlash

Why isn’t the NDIS getting young people out of nursing homes?

WHAT’S ON TODAY

Brisbane

  • The banking royal commission will continue examining banks’ dealings with Queensland cattle farming families, to complete the Rabobank case before another farmer and a CBA/Bankwest executive appear.

  • Initial submissions will be heard before the Supreme Court over Ipswich City Council’s request for intervention to stop its elected officials being sacked by the Queensland government.

  • Day one of Barayamal’s two-day First Nations Youth Summit. 

  • Author Michael Robotham will discusses his final “Joe O’Loughlin” novel, The Other Wife, at Brisbane Square Library.

Adelaide

  • South Australia’s royal commission into the Murray-Darling Basin will hold its second day of the current round of public hearings.

  • University of Adelaide lecturer Dr Jenni Caruso will deliver an address, “Cultural Oration – The Myth of Saving Children: The Impacts of 20th Century Half-Caste Child Assimilation”.

Canberra

  • Trade Minister Steven Ciobo will deliver a speech, “China-Australia Free Trade Agreement: Future opportunities”, to the UTS Australia-China Relations Institute.

  • The National Portrait Gallery will unveil their major winter exhibition: So Fine: Contemporary Women Artists Make Australian History.

Hobart

  • Final planned day of the Legislative Council’s Estimates Committee will hear from the Minister for Human Services, Housing and Planning Roger Jaensch; the Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, Disability Services and Community Development, Sport and Recreation, and Women Jacquie Petrusma; and the Minister for Primary Industries and Water, and Racing Sarah Courtney.

Melbourne

  • CEDA will host a breakfast with experts speaking on augmented reality’s potential economic opportunities.

  • The Actioning Change for Aged Care group will hold a “crisis meeting” amid calls for a royal commission into the sector and the implementation of mandatory nurse/carer ratios.

  • Hundreds of union members and supporters, including ACTU Secretary Sally McManus, will descend on Longford outside the Esso gas plant to mark one year since the company and their contractor UGL sacked 230 maintenance workers after they refused 40% paycuts and a new roster.

  • Professor David Cantrill will discuss “The Great South Land: Gondwanan Floras of the Antarctic Fossil Record” at a Royal Society of Victoria event.

  • The cast of Melbourne comedy musical Sleeping Beauty – A Knight Avenger’s Tale will perform two numbers ahead of opening night on Friday.

Sydney

  • Snowy Hydro Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Paul Broad, will deliver a keynote speech on “Insights into Snowy 2.0”, at an event set to also examine the Snowy 2.0 project’s implications for Australia’s energy sector and national electricity market.

  • InterTech Australia will hold a Pride Month celebration event.

  • Future Women will hold a panel discussion on women leaders on “The Problem with Women and Power”.

Perth

  • Black Swan State Theatre Company will hold a panel discussion on “Music as Medicine”, with musicians, psychology experts and music therapists Professor Dawn Freshwater, Iain Grandage, Deborah Pearson, and Goya Zheng.

Darwin

  • Legal academic Ken Parish will hold a discussion on the history of NT self-governance, “Reforming NT self government — reconciling the two towers of power”.

Alice Springs, NT

  • Urban Primary Health Care, CAHS, and Northern Territory government will host Alice Springs’ Food Security Forum and Planning Day.

Bendigo, Victoria

  • Students of Bendigo’s Crusoe College will hand over newly constructed nest boxes to Friends of the Crusoe Reservoir and No. 7 Park to help native wildlife thrive.

Nhulunbuy, NT

  • NT’s Department of Tourism and Culture will hold an Arnhem Tourism Roadshow.

Wellington, New Zealand

  • The Reserve Bank of New Zealand is largely expected to leave the country’s official cash rate at its record low 1.75%.

THE COMMENTARIAT

An inquiry into gay hate crimes would be a mark of respect to victims — Nicolas Parkhill (Sydney Morning Herald): “Strike Force Parrabell involved years of additional investigative work by police and ACON is grateful for that investment. However, we are obliged to continue to ask questions and seek justice for those who died, and for those whose experiences are not included in Parrabell because they survived their injuries.”

Donald Trump’s Muslim travel ban win may be good law but it’s bad policyDr Sandeep Gopalan (ABC): “The US Supreme court has handed President Donald Trump a major victory in upholding his so-called Muslim travel ban. While the ruling is defensible given the high deference accorded to the President in national security matters, the judgment potentially undermines America’s longstanding constitutional tradition of religious tolerance.”

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