MISINFORMATION AND A PAUSED INVESTIGATION
Note: This story discusses sexual assault.
Parliament House security guard Nikola Anderson has recounted to Four Corners her experience of seeing Brittany Higgins on the night and morning of her alleged rape.
Anderson has specifically hit out at claims by Scott Morrison and others in government that the man accused of the rape had his employment terminated over an undisclosed “security breach” given that guards followed protocols on the night. She also says the AFP have not interviewed her.
As The New Daily details, the news comes after Secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet — and Morrison’s former chief of staff — Phil Gaetjens revealed that, on March 9, he “paused” his review into what Morrison’s staff knew about the allegations, following an alleged request by police.
However, AFP commissioner Reece Kershaw denies directly requesting a pause on the internal review, only that police raised concerns over a potential “intersection” of inquiries. And while Gaetjens says he emailed Morrison and his staff, news.com.au notes the prime minister last week claimed had not been provided any “update”.
Morrison denies misleading parliament.
PS: Gaetjens also refused to answer several questions out of alleged concern for the AFP investigation, instead taking them on notice “for the benefit of Ms Higgins”. Rebuffed questions include whether Morrison’s staff had retained lawyers in relation to PM&C’s review.
PPS: As of yesterday, Morrison has also avoided nine separate questions on whether he asked his staff if they backgrounded journalists about Higgins’ partner, David Sharaz, who last month alleged the office had released information to reporters and that he left his job at a Canberra media monitoring company over concerns of government contracts.
1800 Respect: 1800 737 732; Lifeline: 13 11 14.
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WEATHER: THE STORM
The Bureau of Meteorology has warned that “around 10 million Australians in every mainland state and territory” with the exception of Western Australia faced weather warnings last night as two major systems collided over “an area similar to the size of Alaska”.
As The Sydney Morning Herald reports, this meant wind, rainfall and surf warnings across the entire New South Wales coast. The NSW State Emergency Service received 1485 requests for assistance in the 24 hours to Monday night, while the Australian Defence Force will support flood emergency efforts from today. news.com.au also notes a landslide has closed one of the major roads out of Sydney, Bells Line of Road, which connects Richmond in western Sydney with the town of Bell in the Blue Mountains.
Drier conditions are forecast for most of NSW and southern Queensland by Wednesday, and while wet weather is set to continue tomorrow in Tasmania and Victoria the system should be clear of the continent by Thursday.
For the latest updates, see BOM’s national weather warnings, ABC Emergency’s postcode/suburb guide, or NSW State Emergency Service’s interactive Hawkesbury-Nepean Valley map.
A BUNCH OF WANKERS
Material provided to Channel 10 and The Australian ($) shows at least four Coalition staffers filming themselves performing solo sex acts on the Parliament House desks of female MPs, and, subsequently, sharing the material on Facebook Messenger over a two-year period ending last year.
The ABC notes that, in a statement, Scott Morrison has condemned the material and confirmed at least one of the men has been sacked.
LESS-THAN-SUPER PLAN DITCHED
Finally, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Women Marise Payne revealed in estimates last night that the government will ditch its early-release superannuation scheme for survivors of domestic abuse, following complaints of its potential for financial coercion and impact on survivors’ long-term financial security.
The news comes as the Morrison government, which briefly brought social security payments above poverty rates last year, prepares to end the coronavirus supplement and bring the rate up just $25 a week — i.e. slashing $50 per week from total payments — starting April 1.
THEY REALLY SAID THAT?
[Australian-born Kayaan Katyal, a six-year-old with cerebral palsy, has been denied a visa because he] would be likely to result in a significant, undue cost to the Australian community in the areas of healthcare and/or community services.
Department of Home Affairs representative
Because the Migration Act explicitly allows discrimination based on disability, Home Affairs rejects a family’s visa application on their estimations that Kayaan — a boy with an Australian birth certificate — would cost $1.23 million to survive over 10 years.
THE DIRTY COUNTRY: CORRUPTION IN AUSTRALIA
Catch up on our multi-part series, The Dirty Country: Corruption in Australia. We’ve made it free to all readers so please share widely.
Transparency gap: business interests become conflicts of interest — and few seem to care
“Former defence minister Christopher Pyne has come under scrutiny for his growing client list of defence contractors. His two lobbying firms represent companies that won millions in government contracts while he was a minister, and prompted a formal warning from the attorney-general.
“Conflicts have also been on display inside the Queensland Labor government. Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk’s former political adviser Cameron Milner was a key adviser to the government during the state election in October at the same time as he was working as a lobbyist for industry.”
CRIKEY RECAP
What a lovely pandemic: Australia’s 250 richest now own the equivalent of 25% GDP
“If you found 2020 a tough year, you’re obviously not rich enough.
“It’s been a good pandemic for Australia’s richest people, and The Weekend Australian (of all places) has now revealed just how good: the total wealth of the richest 250 Australians is up about 25%. That’s a jump from $377 billion to $470 billion.
“This fact was buried deep on page 82 of the paper’s glossy magazine insert, The List. I’m sure you didn’t expect the Murdoch media to go all Thomas Piketty with their rich list, but here we are.”
High stakes, big sums: the economics of Christian Porter’s defamation trial
“There’s a rumour going around among the sewer rats of Twitter that taxpayers are funding Christian Porter’s defamation claim against the ABC. That rumour is false. Numerous sources have reported the attorney-general won’t get taxpayer funding for the case.
“Still, litigation of the kind he’s pursuing — taking on the ABC with the cream of the Sydney bar on his side — doesn’t come cheap. Tally up the legal costs and it’s way out of reach for most Australians. And even for an attorney-general on an ever-increasing salary it’s a huge financial burden.”
Personal lives: have male MPs been getting away with too much under the shield of privacy?
“ABC reporter Leigh Sales is rethinking staying away from politicians’ personal lives following revelations of sexual violence in Parliament.
“Speaking to the Sydney Media Club on Wednesday, Sales said she had been doing a lot of ‘soul-searching’ on the issue in recent weeks: ‘Have I been educated in, and almost brainwashed, into a system that has protected powerful men at the expense of women … like their wives, or their staffers?’”
READ ALL ABOUT IT
Former MP Daryl Maguire recommended for criminal prosecution by ICAC
Christian Porter will return to work on full $370,000 salary despite delegating some duties
David Honey set to become leader of WA Liberals
Probe into LNP’s secretive banned property developer donation dinners ($)
Brereton war crimes investigations start still months away: Chris Moraitis
Australian government says minor, 15, ‘requested’ to be deported to New Zealand
Paper cuts: Qld government to axe compulsory print media advertising
Country Fire Service review into Kangaroo Island fires highlights systemic failings ($)
AstraZeneca vaccine is 79% effective against symptomatic COVID-19, company says
Israel revokes permit of Palestinian foreign minister
Saudi-led coalition intensifies Yemen air raids, hits grains port
THE COMMENTARIAT
The Morrison government will never get serious about stopping sexual harassment at work — Jenna Price (The Sydney Morning Herald): “When Kelly O’Dwyer announced an inquiry into sexual harassment at work midway through 2018, I was pathetically excited. Excited because I believed I would see the end of the terrible hurt and exploitation of women at work and, selfishly, an end to the job of so many older women as de facto counsellors.”
One veteran on average dies by suicide every 2 weeks. This is what a royal commission needs to look at — Deborah Morris and Ben Wadham (The Conversation): “This is an important day for the veteran community. After five years of campaigning for a royal commission, parliament has backed a motion to establish one. Prime Minister Scott Morrison has also signalled he would no longer oppose the move.”
In too deep: housing on the floodplain ($) — Ian Dinham (The Australian): “The flooding in the Hawkesbury-Nepean area in western Sydney is not unexpected. Since the 1990s, various studies and reports have highlighted the extreme flood risks in this valley. As recently as June last year, the NSW State Emergency Service released a report — Hazard and Risk in the Hawkesbury-Nepean Valley — that details why the floods in this area are so large and deep, and why they are so dangerous.”
* The Australian Defence Force will support emergency efforts from today*… Goodness me. I’m sure the people of Taree, Wingham, Wauchope and all the other towns and villages up this way, will be happy to hear that.
Especially those with young children waiting on rooftops on Saturday for hours, when power was cut and homes and animals washed out to sea (and subsequently washing up on beaches, dead), whilst the NSW Premier, and I use the term loosely, couldn’t have given a damn.
When people were using social media to try and get word out to emergency services whilst decrying the SES as being, *woefully under-resourced*…much like what went on during the six months of bushfires in the region, that only ended just before Covid restrictions came in.
I’m furious, and I’m not impacted by the floods up here. I’ve recorded over 520mm rain in my gauge over the past 6 days and the rain continues to fall.
Furious because floods apparently only impact and inconvenience Sydney, a place where I lived most of my life until a few years ago.
Furious because ABC News and many others, on Saturday were reporting on the impact flooding would have in Sydney, while people up here were begging for help…and had the audacity to report on people being, *rescued crossing flooded roads in Wollongong and Penrith*, to name a couple of *headline grabbing stories*.
Furious that once again the people of the Mid North Coast don’t warrant assistance from the State or Federal governments until AFTER the event.
Furious that as one concerned resident said, there’s only , * One major hospital with an emergency department for the Mid North Coast and that is at Taree, which was completely cut-off by floodwaters by Saturday* … despite the good old Nationals promising that they had funding from Morrison to build another one in Forster.
The alternative to Taree is Newcastle, two hours down the highway, also impacted by low level flooding, or Port Macquarie and Coffs Harbour, one-hour and 2.5 hours North…oh, wait, they were impacted by flooding too.
So, to me – just a nobody and a nothing, with no Degrees in anything- but somebody who actually cares about what these back-to-back-to back-to back-to back events are having on thousands of people up here….enduring months of drought in 2018-19 followed by 6 months of devastation from the Bushfires, and breathing noxious smoke from burning animals, homes, cars, forests then Level 4 water restrictions, torrential rain and floods, and now major floods…all in the space of just over two years…it is and must be too much to bear!
And please don’t mention the resilience of these people because that is utter rubbish.
The fact is that because they don’t live in big cities, nobody cares.
Meanwhile, good old Gladys is spruiking her nonsense about Warragamba and raising the height of the wall by 14 metres as an, * I told you so* moment, acknowledging that these rain events had been forecast for weeks.
Funnily enough, nobody thought to release water in a timely fashion beforehand, to avoid the major flooding now occurring downstream in areas that have flooded (that’s why they’re called floodplains or flood zones) long before colonialisation made matters a thousand times worse.
Dear old Gladys has an awful lot to answer for, along with her bestie Morrison …but hey, they’re trying to save Sydney and its inhabitants, so that’s the main thing, isn’t it?
I could apologise for my comments, believe me I’ve got plenty more, but I won’t.
I’ve been suffering constant heartbreak/heartache/diagnosed PTSD since the Bushfires up here, and the pain I’ve felt for those who’ve continued to suffer, human and animal, during these years is compounded by the knowledge that the people elected (not by me) by the majority, could not care less.
Heavy stuff isn’t it?
I wonder if the ADF will assist the people already cleaning up the beaches of debris, dead animals and what was once people’s belongings, much like the devastating scenes on the beaches after the Bushfires?
Somehow, I doubt it!
Morrison in parliament (somehow?) misreading (his) “the twelfth of February 2021” to come out as in “…. The first that my office became aware of an alleged sexual assault, I’m advised, was on the fifth of April of this year ………”?
The juxtaposition of day and month, plus 2021 becoming “this year” – and there was that “I’m advised” wormhole?
Considering what went on around April 5 2019 – between Wednesday April 3 when Leembruggen came into the loop, Thursday April 4 Reynolds and Brown meeting the AFP : and Monday April 8 when the AFP said they were getting pushback from Parliament House re getting hold of CCTV footage on the Morrison’s “security breach”?
“Tosser snaps”?
Coalition staffers (in their sense of entitlement?) using Parliament House as some kind of “erotic self-amusement park” – from 2019 to 2020?
… Were such comings and goings (that facilitated those self-indulgences) not uncommon at that time?
… Would there be any selfies of the offence that took place in Reynold’s office?
“Erotic self-abusement park”?