One person in Syrian group temporarily banned from Australia
Josh Butler
Home affairs minister Tony Burke has announced one person among the group of 34 Australian women and children in a Syrian detention camp has been issued with a temporary exclusion order, banning them from coming to Australia for up to two years.
The group – the wives, widows and children of ISIS fighters – have been attempting to leave the al-Roj camp on Monday, but were turned back. The government has faced criticism and questions over how it has responded to the group, but Albanese government ministers have said they’re not providing repatriation or assistance to the group.
Burke has been taking advice from security agencies as to whether any should be subject to a temporary exclusion order, which can be levelled on Australian citizens if the minister “suspects on reasonable grounds” that such an order would prevent a terrorist act or supporting a terror group.
In a statement on Wednesday afternoon, Burke confirmed one TEO had been issued, but that others in the group have not been assessed to meet the necessary threshold. He said:
I can confirm that one individual in this cohort has been issued a Temporary Exclusion Order, which was made on advice from security agencies. At this stage security agencies have not provided advice that other members of the cohort meet the required legal thresholds for temporary exclusion orders.
Updated at 23.34 EST
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Wage growth still too high for RBA
Economists say wages are growing steadily at a rate too high for the Reserve Bank’s liking.
Wages have fallen behind inflation for the first time since 2023, with price growth at 3.8% over 2025 while wages grew just 3.4%, new data today has shown.
ANZ economists expect wage growth to slow to 3% over 2026, which would see real wages fall further.
But even that level of growth would be too high, according to AMP economist Diania Mousina. The RBA wants prices rising at just 2.5%, but wages are rising faster than that, implying businesses will in turn hike prices at a higher rate. Mousina said:
For wages growth to become more sustainable to the 2-3% RBA inflation target we need to see more jobs record wage rises of 2-3%.
A growing share of jobs are getting pay bumps of less than 3%, but most jobs are getting more than 3% pay rises, according to the Australian Bureau of statistics wage data released today:
Graph showing share of jobs that experienced a wage change, grouped by annual rate of increase.
If wages don’t slow to that level, the RBA would come under pressure to hike interest rates again, according to UBS economists
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Josh Taylor
eSafety responds to court ruling on social media warnings
More on the federal court dismissing an eSafety commission appeal:
An eSafety spokesperson acknowledged the decision of the court, and said it was considering the ruling:
Platforms often have material that may breach their terms of service drawn to their attention informally by a range of parties, rather than by formal statutory notifications, and it reduces regulatory burden on service providers compared to formal processes.
Guardian Australia understands since the ART ruling, eSafety has adjusted the language on these notices to state they’re not required to take action, and they’re not statutory notices.
The Online Safety Act review recommended legislative clarity on informal requests, noting that these requests often lead to quicker resolutions for people who may be in severe distress.
On appeal, last year the ART found that the informal notice had constituted a formal decision that the ART could review.
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Josh Taylor
eSafety loses appeal over notice sent to X over queer club tweet
The full federal court has dismissed an appeal by the eSafety commissioner against an earlier ruling that an informal notice about an allegedly bullying tweet from a user about a queer club at a school constituted a formal notice to X.
The user had posted on X and Instagram about a person who ran a queer club for primary school students, which eSafety described as a student-led initiative. The person featured in the user’s post complained to eSafety that it was cyber abuse under the Online Safety Act.
eSafety judged that it was not, but sent an informal notice to X stating it may violate X’s policies on harassment.
X geoblocked the post to prevent Australian users from seeing it. The user then launched an appeal in the Administrative Review Tribunal, leading to X lifting the geoblock. On appeal, last year the ART found that the informal notice had constituted a formal decision that the ART could review.
eSafety appealed to the full federal court, and on Wednesday, the court dismissed the appeal. The full court stated that X “saw this as a legal direction to remove content” and was therefore an exercise of eSafety’s power, despite it being an informal notice.
Updated at 00.04 EST
One person in Syrian group temporarily banned from Australia
Josh Butler
Home affairs minister Tony Burke has announced one person among the group of 34 Australian women and children in a Syrian detention camp has been issued with a temporary exclusion order, banning them from coming to Australia for up to two years.
The group – the wives, widows and children of ISIS fighters – have been attempting to leave the al-Roj camp on Monday, but were turned back. The government has faced criticism and questions over how it has responded to the group, but Albanese government ministers have said they’re not providing repatriation or assistance to the group.
Burke has been taking advice from security agencies as to whether any should be subject to a temporary exclusion order, which can be levelled on Australian citizens if the minister “suspects on reasonable grounds” that such an order would prevent a terrorist act or supporting a terror group.
In a statement on Wednesday afternoon, Burke confirmed one TEO had been issued, but that others in the group have not been assessed to meet the necessary threshold. He said:
I can confirm that one individual in this cohort has been issued a Temporary Exclusion Order, which was made on advice from security agencies. At this stage security agencies have not provided advice that other members of the cohort meet the required legal thresholds for temporary exclusion orders.
Updated at 23.34 EST
Army base in Townsville lifts lockdown after ‘incident’ at barracks
Australia’s defence force is launching an investigation after a major army base in Queensland’s north went into lockdown earlier today.
The defence force confirmed Townsville’s Lavarack Barracks faced an “incident” today that required personnel to enact security protocols. It declined to specify the nature of the incident.
A defence spokesperson said Queensland police attended the barracks and the incident was resolved with “minimal impact” to personnel and operations at the base. They added:
Defence treats all security matters seriously and will conduct an investigation into the circumstances of the incident.
Lavarack Barracks is one of northern Australia’s major military establishments, the home base of elements of multiple brigades as well as Singapore armed forces personnel.
Updated at 23.26 EST
Luca Ittimani
Thanks Nick Visser, and good afternoon readers. Let’s get on to the rest of today’s breaking news.
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Nick Visser
Thanks all, that’s it from me. Luca Ittimani will take things from here.
Video: helicopter crew sounds siren as 4.5-metre white shark spotted off WA coast
A 4.5-metre white shark was spotted off Cape Naturaliste on Sunday. Lifesaving Western Australia posted the video on their Facebook page, saying the crew on the Westpac Life Saver rescue helicopter saw the shark circling two divers.
The divers were alerted and exited the water.
Helicopter crew sounds siren as 4.5-metre white shark spotted off Western Australia coast – video Share
Updated at 23.07 EST
Two people found dead inside home in Rockhampton
Queensland police are investigating the deaths of two people found inside a home in Wandal, a suburb of Rockhampton, on Tuesday night.
Officials said they were called to an address to carry out a welfare check around 8pm last night. On arrival, a woman, 76, and man, 37 were found dead.
A crime scene has been established and investigations are ongoing.
Updated at 23.02 EST
Chris Minns accuses Pauline Hanson of ‘racist intervention’
Minns added he wanted to make it clear, “particularly after the racist intervention of Pauline Hanson in recent days” that “New South Wales is full of wonderful, great Australians of Muslim faith who care about our country”.
The NSW premier said:
The police are there for every Australian in need. The last two months have shown that they will place their own safety at risk to protect another Australian. They have a major role in security for Muslims during the holy month of Ramadan so that our Muslim communities are safe and can celebrate their religion in peace and security.
Chris Minns. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAPShare
Updated at 23.03 EST
NSW premier hopes Ramadan a period of ‘happiness, family and community’
The New South Wales premier, Chris Minns, has said he hopes the Ramadan holy month is a time of “happiness, family and community” for the state’s Muslim community following a protest earlier this month at Sydney’s Town Hall.
Minns said he had met with many Muslim leaders over the last week, saying they were “difficult conversations” after NSW police officers disrupted a group of men praying during the protest against Israeli president Isaac Herzog’s visit to Australia.
The Muslim community have told me of their sadness and hurt following the events of last Monday night.
I said privately what I have said publicly: that NSW police would never have intentionally interrupted a prayer service or religious observance, that it was an incredible difficult event to police, but no offence was intended.
The premier said he agreed there were steps “we can all take” to ensure that the events during the protest don’t happen again, “so our community is not wrenched apart as a result of protests, international conflict or disharmony”.
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Updated at 23.00 EST
Race commissioner calls on Pauline Hanson to apologise to Muslim community
Tom McIlroy
Australia’s race discrimination commissioner says One Nation leader Pauline Hanson should apologise for her comments about the Muslim community, calling them “Islamophobic”.
Giridharan Sivaraman said the comments on Sky News on Monday – in which Hanson said she didn’t know any “good Muslims” – were offensive and would cause lasting damage.
“I hesitate to respond to remarks like these because doing so risks giving further oxygen to sentiments that should have no place in our public debate,” he said, going on:
But comments that single out and diminish any community have real and lasting impacts.
Words that stigmatise and devalue people do not strengthen our society. They increase fear, deepen division, and intensify pain and harm that many in our communities have experienced for far too long.
Giridharan Sivaraman. Photograph: Darren England/AAP
Sivaraman challenged political leaders talking about the importance of social cohesion to take action.
Australia’s Muslim communities – like all our communities – deserve to feel safe, respected and included. Public figures have a responsibility to elevate our national conversation, not inflame tensions, divide us or undermine the dignity of others.
I call on Senator Hanson to withdraw her remarks and offer an apology to Muslim Australians.
Updated at 22.59 EST
Andrew Messenger
Crisafulli says hate speech bill will ‘stand the test of time’
David Crisafulli has wrapped up his press club address after a question on his government’s hate speech bill.
The laws, which will also deal with a national push for gun reform, will give the attorney general the power to ban particular political slogans. She has said she intends to ban only two: “from the river to the sea” and “globalise the intifada”.
Crisafulli was asked whether he had consulted with Muslim communities concerned about their right to protest being restricted and whether he would consider tightening the legislation to make it apply more narrowly to incitements to violence or hatred rather than just “offence”.
He said the bill was already tight and would “stand the test of time”.
“I think as people go through they will see that those arguments don’t hold water and that it’s tight,” he said.
Crisafulli was also asked if he had consulted on the two specific phrases to be proscribed under the legislation:
There’s only two phrases that put in there, deliberately. We put the two that were the ones that were most inciteful towards hatred and we wanted to deal with that antisemitism.
A parliamentary committee will consider the legislation for 17 days, including a 7 day window for public submissions.
Updated at 22.58 EST