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Australia news As it Happened: NT Police chief rejects McCarthy’s call for independent death in custody probe; Ley farewells mother; Marles meets US defence secretary Pete Hegseth in Singapore

Christopher Harris and Alexander Darling
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 6.04pm on May 30, 2025
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What happened today

By Alexander Darling

Thanks for joining us today, we will have more for you in the next live news coverage. Here’s a quick recap:

  • Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has farewelled her mother with an emotional tribute at the funeral in Albury, New South Wales today.
  • Deputy PM and Defence Minister Richard Marles has been busy defending the government’s defence spending. He met his US counterpart Pete Hegseth at a meeting in Singapore today, where Hegseth “respectfully” said Australia should up its spending.
  • Calls for an independent probe into a young man’s death in custody in Alice Springs have been rejected by NT police, while an emotional vigil in honour of the man took place today.
  • It was revealed the nation’s finances were in a better position than expected last month as the government raked in more revenue than expected.
  • And Commonwealth Bank has fixed an issue this afternoon that led to about 450 customers being unable to make transfers between their accounts or pay people using the Commbank and Netbank apps.

There have also been reports that asylum seekers from China were discovered in Arnhem Land in the NT earlier this week, but the Australian Border Force is not commenting on or confirming those reports.

Enjoy your weekend!

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Andrew Tate (right) speaks to the media next to his brother Tristan in a file picture.AP

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Three face court amid Woodside protests

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Returning to one of today’s main stories, and three protesters who targeted a 2023 Woodside annual general meeting with stench gas and flares will be sentenced on downgraded charges.

The trio faced court as protests continue over the extension this week of Woodside’s North West Shelf gas project.

Campaign group Disrupt Burrup Hub on Friday gathered outside the WA District Court, arguing the decision to extend the project’s life showed the government “cannot be trusted with protecting First Nations culture or our climate”.

Marles joins PM in rebuking think tank over defence spending report

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Returning to Defence Minister Richard Marles on ABC News this afternoon, and he was also quick to criticise the Australia Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) over its report yesterday, which concluded the ADF is unprepared for conflict.

Marles made it clear he does not agree with that.

“What we saw, in my view with the ASPI report, is not a report which is particularly intellectually satisfying or at the end of the day, deep in analysis,” Marles said.

“It is the easiest thing in the world to go out there and say that you should spend more, in fact, we are, we are spending significantly more.”

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Former Liberal MP Bridget Archer.Alex Ellinghausen

“Look, I would never say never,” she asked if she would run in politics again.

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Woodside’s North West Shelf gas project in WA.

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Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles met the US Defence Secretary in Singapore today, where Hegseth talked about wanting to see an increase in Australia’s defence spending.

The Trump administration has previously called on Australia to lift its defence spending to 3 per cent of GDP , and last year Marles announced a $50 billion funding boost for defence over the next decade.

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles and US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth in Singapore.DFAT

For the past decade, Australia’s defence spending has hovered around 2 per cent of its GDP.

Marles was just on the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing. Asked whether Hegseth specifically said whether he desired Australia to raise defence spending to 3 per cent of GDP, Marles replied, “I wouldn’t put a number on it.

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