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Australia news: Albanese announces jet fuel, fertiliser shipments; Trump says planned attacks on Iran called off; WHO sends experts to the Congo as Ebola death toll reaches 110

Emily Kaine and Isabel McMillan
Updated ,first published

That’s all for today

By Isabel McMillan

Thanks for reading the national news blog for today, Tuesday, May 19. This is where we will end the rolling coverage.

To recap, here’s some of what we covered today.

  • Jim Chalmers’ fifth federal budget handed down last week was the worst-received economic statement since this masthead’s Resolve Political Monitor began tracking voter perceptions of the budget in May 2021. Just 24 per cent of people polled following last Tuesday’s budget agreed with the proposition that the policies announced this year would be “good” or “very good” for them and their household.
  • Australia will begin extending the lives of its fleet of Collins class submarines this month as the navy tries to bridge a looming capability gap while awaiting AUKUS nuclear submarines. The government announced in 2024 that it would extend the submarines’ lives for another 10 years, but instead of a full-scale replacement of all systems, Defence will now undertake “a conditions-based sustainment approach”.
  • An outbreak of diphtheria labelled the worst in decades has spread from the Northern Territory to Western Australia, Queensland and South Australia, Health Minister Mark Butler has confirmed.
  • Liberal MP Michaelia Cash says the Coalition will put added pressure on the government next week to amend the Sex Discrimination Act “so that sex means biology”. Her comments came after a decision passed down by the Federal Court last week, which upheld a ruling that a transgender woman had been discriminated against after being kicked off a women-only social media app.

  • The acting head of the Bureau of Meteorology who headed the agency during the launch of a heavily criticised $96 million redesign of its website has resigned. Dr Peter Stone was serving as the bureau’s chief customer officer at the time of his resignation, and had worked at the agency since July 2017.

Thanks again for reading. Be sure to join us tomorrow morning as we continue to bring you rolling coverage of the latest news and updates.

‘Bodies in the barrels’ killer’s image revealed after two decades of secrecy

By Isabel McMillan

The image of the youngest “bodies in the barrels” killer can be revealed for the first time in more than two decades.

The South Australian Court of Appeal on Tuesday lifted the 25-year suppression order on the image or description of James Vlassakis, who murdered four of the 11 victims.

His co-accused, John Bunting and Robert Wagner, are serving life sentences in prison with no possibility of parole.

James Vlassakis picutred in 2003.

Vlassakis, who was 18 at the time of the crimes, was a key witness against the two other men, and was granted the opportunity to apply for release at the end of his 26-year non-parole period.

Concern grows as contaminated alcohol hits bottle shops

By

Australians are being put at risk of dire health consequences as tainted illicit alcohol is unknowingly sold in bottle shops, prompting calls for stronger liquor regulation.

Researchers from the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, UNSW and National Drug Research Institute found almost one in three bottle shops visited across Victoria, NSW and Queensland contained suspected illicit alcohol products.

“We’re finding regular bottle shops are stocking products that we suspect are illicit, and that we’ve found have contaminants in them,” postdoctoral research fellow Michala Kowalski told AAP.

The danger is compounded by people being lulled into a false sense of security, believing their purchase is legitimate because it came from a genuine retailer. Researchers found contaminants like methanol and plastic debris in some products.

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Gas giant warns Labor on risk of ‘Argentina-style’ industry collapse

By Nick Toscano

One of Australia’s largest gas producers warns the Albanese government risks replicating failures that led to the decline of the industry in Argentina if it curbs gas exports too aggressively and kills off investment in future domestic sources of supply.

Unprecedented gas reservation rules in eastern Australia are due to kick in from July next year, which will compel exporters of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to hold back the equivalent of up to 20 per cent of what they send overseas each year and ensure they deliver it locally.

The move comes amid growing concerns that too much LNG is being shipped offshore from Queensland at the expense of local buyers, exacerbating a supply crunch and pushing up prices. Despite Australia’s position as one of the world’s biggest LNG exporters, officials warn that Victoria, NSW and South Australia face a domestic shortfall hitting before 2030, as the decades-old production fields of the Bass Strait continue to deplete rapidly; there are not enough new supplies to replace them.

Left unchecked, the shortfall could worsen cost-of-living stresses for consumers who still use gas for cooking and heating, add to the price of electricity, and threaten the viability of factories that use gas for heat or as a feedstock.

Read the full story here.

Pianist’s Palestine comments were selfish, court told

By Liz Hobday

Pianist Jayson Gillham’s commentary on Palestine during a classical music concert was a “middle finger” to those who had helped him build a stellar career, a court has been told.

Gillham performed Connor D’Netto’s composition Witness at a Melbourne Symphony Orchestra concert in 2024, introducing the piece with comments about Israel killing journalists in Gaza.

The orchestra responded by cancelling his next appearance, and the performer is suing the MSO for unfair dismissal in the Federal Court. The case is expected to test the limits of political speech for contractors in Australian workplaces.

Pianist Jayson Gillham outside the Federal Court.Simon Schluter

On the second day of a 15-day trial, the court heard details of senior orchestra management’s handling of the crisis in the days after Gillham’s concert.

Collins sub fleet given life extension to bridge AUKUS capability gap

By Brittany Busch

Australia will begin extending the lives of its fleet of Collins class submarines this month as the navy tries to bridge a looming capability gap while awaiting AUKUS nuclear submarines.

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles announced the $11 billion move at a Lowy Institute event in Melbourne, where he is making a speech this afternoon. The government announced in 2024 that it would extend the submarines’ lives for another 10 years, but instead of a full-scale replacement of all systems, Defence will now undertake “a conditions-based sustainment approach”.

Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles.Dominic Lorrimer

“These decisions reaffirm the Albanese government’s commitment to keeping the Collins class a potent and highly capable strike and deterrent capability today, and for years to come,” Marles, who also holds the defence portfolio, said.

“Extending the life of all six Collins class submarines is critical to maintaining that edge as we transition the navy from conventional to nuclear-powered submarines.”

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‘A stark reminder’: Local Muslim groups stand in solidarity with San Diego shooting victims

By Isabel McMillan

The Islamophobia Register Australia says it is standing in solidarity with the victims of the San Diego Mosque shooting – the largest mosque in the area.

“For many Muslims here in Australia, waking up to this news has brought a familiar mix of grief, fear and exhaustion,” the register said in a statement on Tuesday afternoon.

“A mosque is meant to be a place of peace, solace and refuge. To know that people were killed while
praying is devastating.

“It’s also a stark reminder that these incidents do not happen in a vacuum; it was only last week that Masjid Taqwa in Brisbane was alarmingly threatened for the fifth time. These attacks reflect a global climate in which anti-Muslim hatred is being normalised, minimised and too often ignored until tragedy strikes.

‘Biggest diphtheria outbreak we’ve seen’ spreads to three states and NT

By Nick Newling

An outbreak of diphtheria labelled the worst in decades has spread from the Northern Territory to Western Australia, Queensland and South Australia, Health Minister Mark Butler has confirmed.

“We’re very concerned about this. This is probably the biggest diphtheria outbreak we’ve seen, certainly for decades. I was up Alice Springs a couple of weeks ago meeting with the Aboriginal Medical Service for the Northern Territory. They’re obviously deeply, deeply concerned,” Butler told ABC radio this morning.

Health Minister Mark Butler.Alex Ellinghausen

“Almost all of the cases are Indigenous Australians. We’ve lifted our efforts around vaccine activity there. You’ve got to get a booster probably every five years if you’re an adult. We’re working with the NT government and the Aboriginal-controlled sector to get more vaccines there. But we’re also working with the NT government about other things that we can do to help them.”

Diphtheria vaccines are only available as combination vaccines alongside preventions for other illnesses such as whooping cough and tetanus. The Health Department recommends vaccines be administered for children at two, four, six and 18 months, and again at the ages of four and between 11-13. Boosters are then recommended at the age of 50.

School group of almost 50 rescued from mountain overnight

By Catherine Strohfeldt

A large group of students and teachers have been rescued after they were stranded in the Scenic Rim, south-west of Brisbane, for more than four hours overnight.

The group of 43 students and five teachers called emergency services after being cut off by floodwaters near Mount Barney about 5pm on Monday.

The year 12 students from North Lakes State College were on a school camp as part of coursework for their outdoor recreation certificate II VET course.

Mount Barney National Park sits inland from the Gold Coast, about 120 kilometres south-west of Brisbane.Tourism and Events Queensland

The Education Department said the group had been unable to return to their planned accommodation, leaving them stranded in the national park.

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‘Sex means biology’: Cash calls for legislation change after landmark legal case

By Isabel McMillan

Liberal MP Michaelia Cash says the Coalition will put added pressure on the government next week to amend the Sex Discrimination Act “so that sex means biology”.

Her comments come after a decision passed down by the Federal Court last week, which upheld a ruling that a transgender woman had been discriminated against after being kicked off a women-only social media app.

“Angus Taylor has made it very, very clear: women’s-based sex rights matter, biological sex matters, what you are born at birth matters,” Cash told Sky News this hour.

Liberal MP Michaelia Cash.Dominic Lorrimer

“When we are elected, we will change the Sex Discrimination Act so that ‘sex’ means ‘biology’. In other words, the sex you were born with at birth is the sex that matters in the Sex Discrimination Act.

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