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As it happened: Australian activists released from Israeli jail and deported to Jordan; Gaza ceasefire talks continue in Egypt

Angus Delaney and Emily Kaine
Updated ,first published

What happened today

By Angus Delaney

Thanks for reading our national news live blog. We have now ended our coverage for today and will be back tomorrow morning to cover all the latest developments.

Here’s a look back at the biggest stories:

  • A Senate inquiry has been told that when Optus tried to notify the Department of Communications of its September 18 network outage it sent emails to an incorrect and defunct address, meaning the department was not made aware of the Triple Zero failure until it received a phone call from the communications regulator the following afternoon. The revelation put Communications Minister Anika Wells under fresh scrutiny from the Coalition, which peppered her with questions in parliament.
  • The Department of Home Affairs has granted citizenship to two of the children of the wives of former Islamic State fighters, secretary Stephanie Foster confirmed in a Senate estimates hearing. This appears to indicate the two children granted citizenship were born overseas.
  • The federal government offered a taxpayer bailout to Swiss multinational Glencore’s struggling Mount Isa copper smelter today. Industry Minister Tim Ayres travelled to the north-west Queensland city to announce the deal, which would secure 1100 jobs, the government said. The government has already bailed out the Whyalla Steelworks to the tune of $2.4 billion and is negotiating a lifeline deal for the Tomago aluminium smelter.
  • Three judges will make a decision on whether tens of thousands are allowed to march to the Sydney Opera House in a pro-Palestine protest tomorrow morning. Today the NSW Court of Appeal heard that police held significant concerns over safety and the potential for a crowd crush.
  • Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong is visiting Australia this week and spoke alongside Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at a press conference in Canberra this morning, saying Singapore would commit to deepening its relationship with Australia, including helping Australia become a renewable superpower.

Opera House Palestine protest decision due tomorrow morning

By Michaela Whitbourn, Daniel Lo Surdo and Max Maddison

A planned pro-Palestine march expected to result in tens of thousands of people descending on the Opera House forecourt on Sunday has “disaster written all over it”, NSW Police told the state’s top court as the force seeks to block the rally.

The Court of Appeal held an urgent hearing today in a test case on protest rights as police seek to halt the march from the Sydney CBD to the Opera House. It will deliver its decision tomorrow morning.

Assistant Police Commissioner Peter McKenna told the court he had significant concerns about people entering and exiting the Opera House forecourt.

He said 40,000 to 100,000 people congregating at the site would be impractical.

ASX dragged lower by tech, retail stocks

By

The Australian sharemarket had another dour session as retail and technology stocks took a tumble and investors opted to cash in on the price of gold topping $US4000 an ounce for the first time.

The benchmark S&P/ASX200 pared some of its early losses but still finished 9.2 points (down 0.1 per cent) in the red, with seven of the 11 sectors keeping their head above water. The sharemarket, which fell 0.3 per cent on Tuesday, has racked up losses for three straight sessions this week.

Tracking their peers on Wall Street, tech stocks were among the session’s biggest losers, with WiseTech Global, the nation’s biggest IT stock, edging down 0.4 per cent. Accounting software maker Xero lost 1.7 per cent and tracking app Life360 sank 3 per cent.

Consumer discretionary stocks had another bad day, with Bunnings and Officeworks owner Wesfarmers down 2.2 per cent, electronics chain JB Hi-Fi down 1.3 per cent and furniture seller Harvey Norman down 0.6 per cent. The iron ore heavyweights were mixed, with BHP and Fortescue down 0.2 per cent and 0.3 per cent respectively, while Rio Tinto rose 0.9 per cent.

The financial sector, which makes up more than a third of the ASX, finished mixed. Commonwealth Bank, the biggest stock on the ASX, closed flat, Westpac slipped 0.3 per cent and NAB closed 0.4 per cent lower. ANZ (up 0.5 per cent) closed in the black.

Read the full market wrap here.

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Trump envoy Steve Witkoff to join Gaza peace talks along with Jared Kushner

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Cairo: Peace talks between Israel and Hamas appear to be gaining momentum in Egypt, with US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner set to join the negotiations for their third day.

Qatar said its prime minister and top diplomat, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, would also join the negotiations on Wednesday (Egypt time). Ron Dermer, the top adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, is also expected to join the talks at the Red Sea resort Sharm el-Sheikh.

US special envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff is to join the peace negotiations in Cairo.AP

The talks are focused on a plan proposed by Trump last week that aims to bring about an end to the war.

Senior Hamas official Khalil al-Hayya told Egypt’s Qahera TV that Hamas wanted guarantees of a lasting ceasefire as part of any deal to return the remaining 48 hostages. Israel believes about 20 of the hostages are still alive.

RBA makes a profit following repeated losses

By Shane Wright

The Reserve Bank has turned around a $4.2 billion loss into an $11 billion profit thanks to lower interest rates, a weaker Australian dollar and the huge lift in gold prices.

But the RBA’s annual report, released this afternoon, shows that if it was a private company, it would be in huge financial trouble with negative equity of more than $5 billion.

RBA governor Michele Bullock.Jessica Hromas

Ever since the COVID pandemic, the bank has been recording huge accounting losses including a record $36.7 billion shortfall in 2021-22.

But last financial year it moved back into the black due to $14.7 billion in valuation gains largely linked to the drop in yields on government bonds which the RBA holds and a dip in the value of the Australian dollar.

Gas reservation policy crucial, says Labor MP

By Angus Delaney

Australia should establish an east coast gas reservation policy setting aside a portion of the nation’s gas for domestic use to avoid overpaying, says Labor MP Ed Husic.

Speaking on the ABC, Husic said part of the problem was foreign buyers of Australian gas were selling it on for massive profits, driving up the price Australia paid for gas.

Labor MP Ed Husic said an east coast gas reservation policy would save Australia money. Alex Ellinghausen

“Our gas, our prices should be as simple as that,” Husic said.

“Australia’s averaging $10 a gigajoule for gas. In Qatar, you can get [it] for $2.20 and in the US for $3.”

Husic said if foreign buyers were not using Australian gas for themselves and were instead selling it on at a profit “we should have a mechanism to intervene”.

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Liberals need to stop leaking: Hawke

By Angus Delaney

Asked on the ABC if leaking among the Liberals needed to stop, Alex Hawke said: “I think it should.”

Hawke said that in general it did not happen but it was understandable as the Liberals undergo a review of their policies following the party’s crushing election defeat.

“One of the criticisms of the previous term was we didn’t actually have the real discussions with each other,” he said. “We did prioritise unity, but now we have to prioritise being honest with each other so will have those conversations.

Coalition welcomes Glencore bailout but accuses Labor of crippling heavy manufacturing

By Angus Delaney

The Coalition supports the government’s $600 million bailout for Glencore’s Mount Isa copper smelter, but unfriendly Labor policies have crippled heavy manufacturing in Australia, opposition industry and science spokesman Alex Hawke said.

The Glencore bailout follows the $2.4 billion support package for the Whyalla steelworks (a joint federal and SA government deal). Multibillion-dollar negotiations to support the Tomago aluminum smelter in NSW are ongoing.

Opposition industry and innovation spokesman Alex Hawke (left) and shadow treasurer Ted O’Brien.Alex Ellinghausen

“The simple fact is it’s too expensive to do business in Australia at the moment,” Hawke told the ABC.

“We’re asking the government to get on with the plan of how you actually make it viable to have heavy industry manufacturing in Australia.”

Glencore bailout should come with renewables requirement, say Greens

By Angus Delaney

The government should have written in a renewables power purchase agreement when granting Glencore $600 million to keep its Mount Isa copper smelter open, Greens leader Larissa Waters said.

Waters said the bailout was important to ensure workers kept their jobs, but she hoped the government had imposed conditions on Glencore such as a power purchase agreement, binding it to use renewable energy.

Greens leader Larissa Waters.Alex Ellinghausen

“It seems like it is a big wad of free cash with no strings attached, which is perplexing when Glencore, a Swiss multinational, has made record profits in the last few years and so happened to pay no tax at all on that earnings, which is a bit dodgy,” Waters told the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing.

“Rather than the government just giving free cash to a company … [it] could have instead said … essentially we’ll help you meet your energy needs but do it cleanly.

“I don’t know that is what the government has done, but if it is not too late, that is what they should do.”

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Qantas among 40 companies caught up in major extortion attempt by hackers

By David Swan and Chris Zappone

Qantas is bracing for the fallout from a massive cyberattack that has swept up nearly 40 major corporations as hackers threaten to leak sensitive passenger data unless ransoms are paid by Friday.

Hacker collective Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters claims to have stolen almost 1 billion records by targeting customers of cloud technology giant Salesforce. Their weapon of choice is “vishing”, or voice phishing, hackers posing as legitimate employees and calling company IT helpdesks, convincing unsuspecting staff to grant them access.

The group has given high-profile companies including Qantas, Toyota, Disney and IKEA just days to begin ransom negotiations. The stolen data reportedly includes customer dates of birth, passport numbers and purchase histories collected between April 2024 and September 2025.

Qantas said it was aware of a post that contains samples of data stolen from itself and about 40 other companies. The airline says it is monitoring the situation with the help of specialist cybersecurity experts.

Read the full story here.

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