Australia and Papua New Guinea lock in new defence treaty after delayTom McIlroyTom McIlroy

Australia and Papua New Guinea have locked in a major new defence treaty, weeks after the deal was delayed due to domestic political concerns in PNG.

The cabinet of the PNG prime minister, James Marape, has signed off on the agreement and an announcement is imminent in Port Moresby.

The two countries will agree to defend each other in the event of a military attack, and increase cooperation between the Australian defence force and their PNG counterparts.

Designed to push back against China’s expansionist attitude to Pacific countries, the deal is the latest negotiated by the Albanese government with regional neighbours.

A similar agreement with Vanuatu was also delayed last month.

The treaty will allow PNG citizens to join the ADF, and for Australians to serve with PNG troops, promote interoperability between the two countries and integrate responses to a military attack.

Joint military training and defence exercises are planned, as well as new cooperation on cybersecurity preparedness.

The agreement was due to be signed when Anthony Albanese was in PNG for the 50th anniversary of independence from Australia in September.

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Updated at 22.35 EDT

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Tom McIlroyTom McIlroy

Australian government welcomes new defence pact

The federal government has welcomed a new defence treaty with Papua New Guinea, set to be signed in coming weeks.

PNG’s prime minister, James Marape, confirmed on Thursday the deal was set to be signed, after it was delayed last month by political considerations in PNG.

Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese, and PGN prime minister, James Marape. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AP

A government spokesperson says the treaty is a done deal:

Last month, prime minister Albanese and prime minister Marape signed a joint communique for a Papua New Guinea-Australia Mutual Defence Treaty.

As the leaders said at the time, that Treaty would be signed following Cabinet processes in both countries.

This Treaty will elevate our relationship with PNG to an Alliance – the first in over 70 years and only our third overall.

It puts our relationship with PNG on the same level as we have with the United States and New Zealand and builds on the already strong bonds between our defence forces, our economies and our people.

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Updated at 23.22 EDT

An update on the CommBank outage

Commonwealth Bank said services including payments, online access and ATMs were affected by the outage.

Access is currently being restored.

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Footage shows vessel in flotilla bound for Gaza being intercepted by IDF soldiers – video

Footage captured by a British journalist travelling with the flotilla headed for Gaza captured the moment activists say the Adara vessel was intercepted by IDF soldiers.

The pro-Palestinian Global Sumud Flotilla consists of more than 40 civilian boats and is attempting to breach the maritime blockade of Gaza and bring humanitarian aid to the war-torn territory.

Footage shows vessel in flotilla bound for Gaza being intercepted by IDF soldiers – videoFootage shows vessel in flotilla bound for Gaza being intercepted by IDF soldiers – videoShareFlotilla says boat Australian travelling on intercepted and boardedKrishani DhanjiKrishani Dhanji

The Global Sumud Flotilla says Australian Abubakir Rafiq has been “abducted” after the boat he was on – Spectre – was intercepted and boarded.

Guardian Australia hasn’t separately verified Rafiq being taken, and has contacted Dfat.

Rafiq is one of six Australians who joined the flotilla of more than 40 boats. The latest information we have is that there are about 30 boats that are still on course heading towards Gaza to open up a humanitarian corridor and provide humanitarian aid.

Yesterday Guardian Australia spoke to two other Australians on board – Juliet Lamont and Surya McEwen.

McEwen, who has been on multiple flotillas, said his resolve has been “magnified” as the situation continues to worsen:

The opportunity to bring food to starving children and to bring medicine to people who aren’t being allowed to have medicine is like part of the duty of the human spirit. [It’s] the test of our generation. In decades to come, it’ll be the question like, What did you do during this moment? Or what would you have done?

We represent billions of people across the world, and there’s people on the ground who are doing the same work … we will create peace and justice and equality, finally, for people in Palestine.

Follow the latest developments live:

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Updated at 22.56 EDT

Some Commonwealth Bank services down

CommBank is reporting some of its services are currently unavailable, with some users reporting difficulties accessing the bank’s app.

The bank said in a statement at 12pm:

We’re urgently working to fix this. We’ll continue to provide updates here. We apologise and appreciate your patience.

A CommBank logo. Photograph: Pavlo Gonchar/Sopa Images/Rex/ShutterstockShare

Updated at 22.52 EDT

Benita KolovosBenita Kolovos

Victoria premier says reported review of Suburban Rail Loop ‘commonplace’

Victoria premier Jacinta Allan was asked earlier about a report in the Age, which revealed a major contract for the Suburban Rail Loop is being reviewed by the Foreign Investment Review Board. Allan says it’s “commonplace” and forms part of the tender process.

[FIRB reviews] – they’ve been part of … projects here … for projects like Sydney Metro as well so this is a fairly standard part of the contract and the procurement processes that companies who are engaging on projects in Australia participate in. But let’s also remember that it’s a fantastic thing that we have global companies.

Allan says it’s had no impact on the timeline on the SRL.

ShareAustralia and Papua New Guinea lock in new defence treaty after delayTom McIlroyTom McIlroy

Australia and Papua New Guinea have locked in a major new defence treaty, weeks after the deal was delayed due to domestic political concerns in PNG.

The cabinet of the PNG prime minister, James Marape, has signed off on the agreement and an announcement is imminent in Port Moresby.

The two countries will agree to defend each other in the event of a military attack, and increase cooperation between the Australian defence force and their PNG counterparts.

Designed to push back against China’s expansionist attitude to Pacific countries, the deal is the latest negotiated by the Albanese government with regional neighbours.

A similar agreement with Vanuatu was also delayed last month.

The treaty will allow PNG citizens to join the ADF, and for Australians to serve with PNG troops, promote interoperability between the two countries and integrate responses to a military attack.

Joint military training and defence exercises are planned, as well as new cooperation on cybersecurity preparedness.

The agreement was due to be signed when Anthony Albanese was in PNG for the 50th anniversary of independence from Australia in September.

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Updated at 22.35 EDT

Natasha MayNatasha May

‘People will be turned away from emergency departments’: Minns

Minns said a deal between the states and commonwealth on hospital funding was a “long way off” and in the meantime could result in people being turned away from emergency departments:

Ultimately, the way this will be managed is that people will be turned away from emergency departments. There’s only so many doctors and nurses. There’s only so many paramedics that we can employ in our public hospital system, particularly if it’s going to be starved of funds in the years ahead.

The feds have got deeper pockets. We appreciate they’re under pressure with the NDIS, but we need help to run some of the biggest public hospitals in the country, if not the world.

ShareNatasha MayNatasha May

Commonwealth not stepping up to aged care responsibilities – contributing to hospital bed block, Minns says

The NSW premier, Chris Minns, says the net reduction in the money the commonwealth is contributing to state hospitals is responsible for the bed for bed block in NSW.

At a press conference this morning, Minns said “the offer that we’ve gotten from the commonwealth is lower than the agreed amount from our last national cabinet meeting. So we’re going backwards. We’re not going forwards.”

Chris Minns. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP

Minns explained the commonwealth has the responsibility for aged care which he said is the major source of bed block in hospitals:

We’ve got hundreds of patients in New South Wales public hospitals that would ordinarily be discharged, except they’ve got nowhere to go. They’re all aged, and they need a place to go.

Now the commonwealth’s responsibility is aged care in New South Wales and Australia across every jurisdiction, and they can’t have it both ways. We can’t have hundreds of patients who are in New South Wales public hospitals that should be discharged and at the same time, see a net reduction in the amount of money that the commonwealth is prepared to give the states.

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Updated at 21.48 EDT

Two bushwalkers rescued from Cradle Mountain national park less than a week after a tourist died

Two bushwalkers with mild hypothermia are being rescued from rugged wilderness, less than a week after a tourist died in the same area, AAP reports.

The pair activated an emergency beacon at 7.15pm on Wednesday in Tasmania’s Cradle Mountain national park, but an attempt to reach them by helicopter was called off in bad weather.

A rescue in the Cradle Mountain area last week took place after snow fell in the region. Photograph: Tasmania Police

An on-foot search and rescue group reached the bushwalkers and were expected to walk with them to safety on Thursday morning.

They were given treatment for mild hypothermia.

Temperatures in the national park reached zero degrees on Thursday morning – snow has fallen in the area in the past week.

It comes less than a week after a female Chinese tourist died in the national park after being “overcome” by weather conditions while walking with a group.

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Updated at 21.37 EDT