| | Greens MP Adam Bandt labels Immigration Minister Peter Dutton a terrorist who is "prepared to kill people for political gain", while speaking at a Melbourne rally protesting against the treatment of asylum seekers on Manus Island. | | | Russia-linked hackers targeted Hillary Clinton's staffers and went on an all-out blitz across the Democratic Party, getting around top-of-the-line digital security and stealing the emails of campaign boss John Podesta in March 2016. | | | Netflix is cutting all ties with Kevin Spacey after a series of allegations of sexual harassment and assault, and will not be involved with any further production of House of Cards that includes him. | | | The Wallabies' spring tour begins in earnest as Australia faces off against Japan in Yokohama. Follow all the action in our live rugby union ScoreCentre. | | | Dimitrios Jimmy Gountounas and Leo Yan Lai Cheung allegedly had a plan to leave a drug importing business they'd been working for to start a multi-million-dollar business of their own. | | | As Donald Trump touches down in Hawaii, the White House confirms the US President will hold bilateral talks with Malcolm Turnbull in the Philippines later this month. | | | Does the Australian Catholic Church have the courage to answer the Pope's call to root out the "shameful ill-treatment" of women? And is its all-male hierarchy, still reeling from revelations of child sexual abuse, capable of leading the charge? | | | It might seem odd to her Australian friends, but Nicole Xie, 28, doesn't think twice about splitting her pay with her parents — a practice in many families of Chinese background. | | | Around 1 million bees, valued at more than $1 million, are killed after a truck carrying their hives crashes in Northern California. | | | Vandals smash more than 40 gravestones and monuments at a South Australian regional cemetery in an act described by the local mayor as "desecration on a massive scale". | | | The dual citizenship debacle has seen six politicians kicked out of Parliament. So what would happen if the rules applied to all of our former prime ministers? | | | The next chapter promises even more intrigue, with an appeal that will review comments US President Donald Trump has made about the case and a much-anticipated finale to season two of the hit podcast Serial in the works. | | | For decades, Mike Willesee was the voice of current affairs, and one of television's most recognisable personalities. Now, as he battles throat cancer and struggles with the loss of his voice, he opens up to Australian Story. | | | The Australian inventor behind the first weed seed killing machine calls for testing of similar products entering the market, after an engineer who worked on the device releases his own version. | | | Secret surveillance cameras installed inside a Swedish delivery truck capture footage of several thieves jumping from the top of a speeding car into the back of the truck as it drives along a highway. | | | With the recent closure of Holden, you might be convinced that Australian manufacturing is in crisis. But that's not the full story. | | | More than 2,300 people gather at the Seoul Kimchi Festival and make tonnes of spicy cabbage to donate to needy neighbours in the South Korean capital. | | | Race favourite Ace High wins the Victoria Derby, blitzing the competition in a dominant victory ahead of Sully and Astoria. | | | Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk's decision to not support a concessional Federal Government loan for the Adani coal mine could halt the multi-billion-dollar project, Northern Australia Minister Matt Canavan says. | | | More than 30 metres below south London's streets, in tunnels built to help people escape the bombs of Nazi Germany, lies a crowd-funded farm that is helping feeding the people above. | | | While Australia obsesses about Tim Cahill's ankle, the Honduran Football Federation is still figuring out ways of paying for the transport of its side as the World Cup play-off between the two countries fast approaches. | | | The ancient craft of hedge laying is revived in parts of southern Australia, with people cutting, bending and chainsawing the thorny plants into shape in an effort to restore some of the nation's first farming fences. | | | By Chris O'Brien | | | By Jacob Kagi | | | By Rachel Mealey in Tokyo, national affairs correspondent Greg Jennett and China correspondent Matthew Carney | | | By Michelle Smith, Deakin University | | | | | The ABC sent this message to starnewsposting@gmail.com these details are included to help provide assurance that this is a genuine email from ABC.
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