Australia news live: Greens urge people ‘vote for nature’ after Labor shelves EPA; two more cases of antisemitic vandalism in Sydney’s east

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Voters should ‘vote for nature’ at next election: Greens

The federal Labor government’s retreat on its long-promised Nature Positive reforms is a capitulation to vested interests, South Australian Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young says.

Speaking in parliament house on Sunday, the Senator criticised the government for shelving its Nature Positive reforms for a second time.

The prime minister doesn’t have what it takes to protect Australia’s forest and to protect our wildlife. Gina Reinhardt, Roger Cook, the WA mining industry said, boo, and the prime minister jumped.

The Senator rubbished claims the Greens were making “increasingly extreme demands”, saying this was a convenient excuse by the prime minister, who did not want to negotiate.

The mining industry and the fossil fuel industry are going to take every inch they can to stop environmental regulation. I mean, you give these bastards an inch and they take a mile.

The Senator also described the opposition leader, Peter Dutton’s, performance on ABC Insiders earlier this morning as “sinister”, saying a Coalition government would be a re-run of Tony Abbott’s government upon his election in 2024.

What a sinister performance to tell Australians that you’re going to cut services, but you won’t tell Australians which services or by how much. And who does this bloke think he is? Does he really believe that Australians are going to appreciate being treated like mugs? Australians are not idiots.

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Chris Hardman, Chief Fire Officer for Forest Fire Management Victoria is giving an update on the bushfire that is burning out of control in the Grampians National Park.

Hardman says there are two active fires, the first in the Little Desert National Park, which is north of the Grampians National Park. Earlier today the fire was considered contained, but dry conditions and strong wins means it has breached containment lines and is burning south towards from the McDonald Highway.

The second fire, the bigger of the two, is in the Grampians National Park, and is placing communities around the Victoria Valley at risk.

Hardman says the fires are coming out of dry, forested areas with very steep rocky outcrops that makes it difficult to access. Aerial assets are currently being used in an attempt to bring them under control.

The situation has been made worse by 8000 dry lightning strikes “none of that with rain.”

What we see is instability in the atmosphere, which causes thunderstorm activity, and quite often in conditions like we’re seeing with the heat wave conditions, that lightning can come out of those storms without any rain.

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Latest antisemitic graffiti in Sydney’s east not linked to caravan plot, police say

Det Supt Darren Newman, commander of Strike Force Pearl, says New South Wales police are investigating the latest antisemitic graffiti, this time spray painted on homes and cars in Sydney’s east.

Newman said police do not believe the graffiti was linked to previous reports of vandalism in recent days, notably, a separate investigation involving a caravan filled with explosives.

That said, New South Wales police confirmed that “some of the incidents we are investigating under Strike Force Pearl are linked” but declined to provide more details. Newman said police were looking at timing and methods.

At this point in time, we have certainly been able to identify … and even as of Friday there was some antisemitic graffiti in Kingsford, and we made an arrest of a person while they were doing it.

Officers are out 24-7 looking for the individuals who may responsible for that type of offending.

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Voters should ‘vote for nature’ at next election: Greens

The federal Labor government’s retreat on its long-promised Nature Positive reforms is a capitulation to vested interests, South Australian Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young says.

Speaking in parliament house on Sunday, the Senator criticised the government for shelving its Nature Positive reforms for a second time.

The prime minister doesn’t have what it takes to protect Australia’s forest and to protect our wildlife. Gina Reinhardt, Roger Cook, the WA mining industry said, boo, and the prime minister jumped.

The Senator rubbished claims the Greens were making “increasingly extreme demands”, saying this was a convenient excuse by the prime minister, who did not want to negotiate.

The mining industry and the fossil fuel industry are going to take every inch they can to stop environmental regulation. I mean, you give these bastards an inch and they take a mile.

The Senator also described the opposition leader, Peter Dutton’s, performance on ABC Insiders earlier this morning as “sinister”, saying a Coalition government would be a re-run of Tony Abbott’s government upon his election in 2024.

What a sinister performance to tell Australians that you’re going to cut services, but you won’t tell Australians which services or by how much. And who does this bloke think he is? Does he really believe that Australians are going to appreciate being treated like mugs? Australians are not idiots.

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More and more tourists are being attacked by dingoes on Queensland’s K’gari. Can it be stopped?

Four people were reportedly attacked by dingoes in separate encounters on the same Australian island in recent weeks – including a toddler who was flown to hospital after being bitten on the leg.

And this is just the latest spate of violent dingo-human interactions on the popular tourist island of K’gari, which last year saw a pack of three rush and bite a woman who was jogging along a beach, a dingo shot and killed with a spear gun and several others put down after attacking people.

Dingoes on the popular tourist island of K’gari. Photograph: Sam Brisby/Getty Images/iStockphoto

David Crisafulli’s government has announced it will scrap the previous government’s move to cap visitor numbers during peak periods, a plan designed to help ease human interaction with the animals.

So what happens now?

For the answer to that question, read the full explainer by Guardian Australia’s Joe Hinchliffe:

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Heatwave puts pressure on fire-ravaged Victoria

Sweltering, dry weather in February could spell a longer fire season in a state already ravaged by blazes, as a three-day heatwave is set to test firefighters.

An extended heatwave could worsen bushfires in two national parks that have destroyed property and burnt more than 100,000 hectares.

The mercury is predicted to reach the high 30s and low 40s across Victoria from Sunday to Tuesday as part of a three-day heatwave.

The high temperatures also bring the chance of dry thunderstorms and lightning, increasing the risk of fires in western and central districts, including metropolitan Melbourne.

Fires continue to burn in the Grampians National Park, while the threat in the Little Desert National Park has reduced after crews were able to contain the blaze.

Firefighters are working to manage hazardous trees, set up containment lines and extinguish hotspots as those living nearby are warned to enact their bushfire plan as conditions worsen.

High levels of smoke and ash have been reported in the area, with a smoke haze from the Grampians fire blanketing Adelaide on Sunday morning.

It comes as fire crews ready for a longer-than-usual fire season, with little rain predicted for Victoria in February.

Elsewhere, vast parts of WA have high and extreme fire danger ratings on Sunday as North Queenslanders brace for historic rainfall leading to life-threatening flooding.

AAP

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People with insufficient home insurance more likely to risk their lives in bushfires, experts say

People are more likely to risk their lives in bushfires if they are uninsured or underinsured, experts have said.

In the chaos of an approaching fire, most people struggle to make rational decisions; having no house insurance could feed into making the dangerous decision to stay and protect a home, bushfire behaviour and management professor at the University of Melbourne, Trent Penman, said.

Last year, 1.6m Australian households struggled to pay for home insurance, a 30% increase on the year before, according to the Actuaries Institute. Some areas also are becoming uninsurable.

A 2024 Compare the Market survey found more than one in four Australians did not have home or contents insurance.

It’s also the first essential item people stopped paying for “when things got tough”, the Australian Council of Social Service (Acoss) has found.

“Insurance premiums have surged by an average of 11% and as high as 30% in disaster-prone regions over the past year,” chief executive officer Dr Cassandra Goldie said.

For more on this story, read the full report by Guardian Australia reporter Tory Shepherd:

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BoM: heavy rain likely to continue in north Queensland

Rainfall up to 620mm has fallen in 24 hours on some parts of northern Queensland in the latest Bureau of Meteorology update.

Dean Narramore, senior BoM meteorologist, said these falls have led to major flash and riverine flooding along the Herbert River, the Ross River, the Boley River and the Hortern River in the Townsville area.

Unfortunately, that rain is likely to continue in the coming days.

Narramore said a slow-moving tropical low sliding west-southwest across the state is driving moderate to heavy rainfall, with intense rainfall in some areas, conditions that will continue into Monday before it starts to ease.

The BoM was current warnings for heavy to locally-intense rainfall and damaging winds in the region with the potential for 400mm of rainfall in some areas.

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Woman’s death in Queensland flood waters ‘heartbreaking’, says PM

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has described reports of a death in a community outside Townsville as “heartbreaking”.

Heartbreaking news out of Queensland today, with police confirming a woman has died in flood waters in Ingham.

My thoughts are with the family and the entire community at this awful time.

The full support of the Queensland and federal governments is being deployed to assist with these floods.

I have spoken with premier Crisafulli and reiterated we will supply whatever resources are required to deal with this event.

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Papers, polls, PR and politics: meet the powerful lobby firm with a finger in every Tasmanian pie

Tasmania’s Derwent Valley Gazette is not the kind of publication that generally springs to mind as part of a powerful media empire. For 72 years, it has quietly served the local news needs of the region west of Hobart.

But some in the island state are concerned that ownership of a string of local publications and a polling company has passed to owners that also operate a powerful lobby firm, present political commentary on their podcast and have worked on campaigns for the incumbent Liberal government.

Font Public Relations, based in Hobart, represents clients with a high profile in the state, including Airbnb and Salmon Tasmania.

“No one knows their way around Tasmanian state and federal politics better,” its website says.

Until 2019, there was nothing very unusual about its work. But then the company saw an opportunity to move into the newspaper business, buying a handful of struggling local papers – including the Gazette and the Sorell Times.

Brad Stansfield (left), one of Font’s directors, in 2018. Photograph: AAP

Questions about media diversity at the time were met with assurances the titles would be independently edited.

In 2020, it added two more, and now Font Publishing manages eight titles across the state. None are large publications, but a bit of local coverage can go a long way in a market the size of Tasmania.

For more on this story, read the full feature from Guardian Australia investigative reporter Ariel Bogle:

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Ben Smee

Almost six years to the day since last major Townsville flood

Residents in parts of Townsville will have woken this morning with a sense of deja vu – it is almost six years to the day that the last major flood prompted evacuations of low-lying areas of north Queensland’s largest city.

Authorities have ordered a “black zone” be evacuated by midday. That includes mostly low-lying areas by the banks of the Ross River. They include Hermit Park, Railway Estate and Rosslea – all older city suburbs on the northern bank – and parts of the southern side with newer suburban areas, including Idalia, Oonoonba and Cluden.

More than 300mm is expected to hit parts of north Queensland in about six hours. The Ross River Dam, which flows down through Townsville, is already at 142% capacity.

That is still well below historical highs and the level from 2019. But if there is a huge dump of rain today, authorities will need to begin the fraught discussions about how and when water is released into the river system to ease pressure. Doing so can create flooding problems downstream.

Vehicles are stranded on the Stuart Drive and Bruce Highway intersection in the 2019 Townsville floods. Photograph: Andrew Rankin/AAP
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Police respond to latest anti-Jewish vandalism in Sydney’s east

New South Wales police are investigating after homes and cars have been vandalised with anti-Jewish graffiti, the latest in a string of such incidents.

Police officers were called to See Lane, Kingsford and King Lane, Randwick on Sunday morning after reports of cars, garages and properties had been spray painted.

Crime scenes have been established at both locations and Strike Force Pearl, which has been set up to tackle hate crimes, is conducting an investigation.

New South Wales police has encouraged anyone with information to contact crime stoppers.

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