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As it happened: Cyclone Alfred throws election date into doubt; PM subtly sledges Dutton’s public service cuts

Josefine Ganko and Daniella White
Updated ,first published

That’s all for today

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That’s all for our national blog for the day. To keep across Cyclone Alfred updates you can continue to read our dedicated blog here.

To recap the day’s other news:

  • Passengers have recounted the terrifying moment when an armed teen boarded a Jetstar flight at Avalon Airport. 
  • Former broadcaster Alan Jones has been hit with a further indecent assault charge, bringing the total number of his alleged victims to 11.
  • A weak Pope Francis thanked people for prayers in audio message. Francis’ feeble voice, discernible through his laboured breaths and in his native Spanish, was recorded from the hospital and broadcast to the faithful in St Peter’s Square in Vatican City, who have gathered for the nightly recitation of the rosary prayer.
  • Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan’s chief political adviser Matt Phelan will vacate the role 18 months after being hired in one of the first major shake-ups of her office since coming to power. Phelan replaced Daniel Andrews’ chief of staff, Lissie Ratcliffe, after the former premier stepped down and Allan was elevated to lead the state.

  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says he will travel to Saudi Arabia on Monday for a meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman ahead of talks later in the week with US officials. “Next week, on Monday my visit to Saudi Arabia is planned to meet the crown prince,” Zelensky wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

  • President Donald Trump has postponed 25 per cent tariffs on most goods from Mexico for a month amid widespread fears of the impact of a broader trade war.

‘David and Goliath battle’: WA leaders make final pitch to voters

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The electoral combatants have sharpened their pitch to Western Australian voters in a state poll that most people predict is a forgone conclusion.

Labor is universally tipped to win a historic third term in Saturday’s election after two landslide victories in 2017 and 2021.

WA Liberal leader Libby Mettam.Nine

But the Liberals are hoping the party can significantly erode the incumbent’s 53 of 59 seat stranglehold on the WA lower house.

Two opinion polls published on Friday point to gains for the Liberals.

Alfred update predicts arrival time of Saturday morning

By Kayla Olaya

Tropical Cyclone Alfred will arrive at Queensland’s coastline around 10am local time, according to the new track map provided by the Bureau of Meteorology.

Alfred continues to be predicted to land as a category 1, moving at a speed of 8 km/h.

The cyclone currently sits 125 kilometres south-east of Brisbane and 90 kilometres north-east of Gold Coast.

Bureau of Meteorology Brisbane manager Matthew Collopy said Alfred was expected to cross just north of the CBD tomorrow, after passing over the Moreton Bay islands in the early morning.

“Damaging wind gusts to 120km/h [are] occurring on the coast between Cape Moreton and Cape Byron,” he said in his latest update this afternoon from the state emergency centre at Kedron.

“These damaging winds are still expected to continue through today and then pick up as the system approaches and extend from the south [Queensland] coast and islands towards the mainland.”

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Listen: Weak Pope Francis thanks people for prayers in audio message

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Rome: Circling back to the Pope’s health, here is the full audio from his remarkable message broadcast on Thursday.

A weak and breathless Pope Francis thanked people for their prayers for his recovery – the first public sign of life from the 88-year-old Pope since he was hospitalised three weeks ago with double pneumonia.

Francis’ feeble voice, discernible through his laboured breaths and in his native Spanish, was recorded from the hospital and broadcast to the faithful in St Peter’s Square in Vatican City, who have gathered for the nightly recitation of the rosary prayer.

“I thank you from the bottom of my heart for your prayers for my health from the square, I accompany you from here,” he said, his soft voice piercing the hushed square.

Premier Jacinta Allan’s top adviser resigns

By Kieran Rooney

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan’s chief political adviser Matt Phelan will vacate the role 18 months after being hired in one of the first major shake-ups of her office since coming to power.

Phelan replaced Daniel Andrews’ chief of staff, Lissie Ratcliffe, after the former premier stepped down and Allan was elevated to lead the state.

Premier Jacinta Allan’s chief of staff has resigned.Wayne Taylor

Before that, he had a senior management role within the Department of Premier and Cabinet. He worked for a short time as a Herald Sun journalist before becoming a public transport bureaucrat.

He told staff on Friday afternoon that he was departing the chief of staff role, which is responsible for managing the premier’s private office and leading the implementation of the government’s agenda.

Zelensky to visit Saudi Arabia on Monday to meet crown prince

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says he will travel to Saudi Arabia on Monday for a meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman ahead of talks later in the week with US officials.

“Next week, on Monday my visit to Saudi Arabia is planned to meet the crown prince,” Zelensky wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

“After that, my team will remain in Saudi Arabia to work with our American partners. Ukraine is most interested in peace.”

The pair at a meeting in Saudi Arabia in June 2024.AP

US President Donald Trump said on Friday he will probably go to Saudi Arabia over the next month and a half.

His special envoy, Steve Witkoff, said he was in discussions with Ukraine for a peace agreement framework to end the three-year war with Russia, and a meeting was planned next week with the Ukrainians in Saudi Arabia.

Reuters

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Thousands of tonnes of dead salmon dumped in landfill

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

The disease outbreak killing salmon in Tasmanian fish farms previously reported by this masthead has reached truly epic proportions.

The Tasmania Environment Protection Authority has described this summer’s salmon mortality event in the south-east of the island state as “unprecedented”.

As waters warm, scientists warn that Tasmania’s oceans will become increasingly unfriendly for salmon farming.The Bob Brown Foundation

Facilities such as landfill sites authorised to take dead salmon have already accepted 5500 tonnes in February alone. To put that in perspective, the entire industry around the state normally produces 75,000 tonnes of salmon a year, government figures show.

The EPA said it had been notified of elevated salmon deaths in hundreds of pens in the D’Entrecasteaux Channel region alone, marking a “significant increase” from previous years. Each pen can contain up to 100,000 fish and while deaths regularly occur, especially when the ocean temperatures are high, aquaculture companies must report to the EPA if more than 5-10 per cent of the fish die.

The EPA is investigating how congealed fish oil washed up on shorelines in the southern D’Entrecasteaux Channel area, an event reported by residents of Verona Sands on February 16.
Tasmania’s Chief Veterinary Officer has advised the salmon deaths are largely caused by an endemic bacterium, with recent testing detecting the bacterium known as Piscirickettsia salmonis (P. salmonis).

Deputy nationals leader won’t rule out cuts to emergency agency

By Olivia Ireland

Circling back to our earlier reporting of concerns about the Coalition’s commitment to funding the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), we thought we’d bring you the full quotes from Deputy Nationals Leader Perin Davey on the issue.

In a radio interview early this morning, Davey, who is the opposition spokeswoman for emergency management, would not rule out cutting jobs at NEMA if the Coalition forms government.

Senator Perin DaveyAlex Ellinghausen

A major policy platform led by Opposition Leader Peter Dutton is a pledge to cut the number of staff employed under the APS. NEMA was established in 2022 by the Albanese government.

Asked on 4BC radio early this morning whether the agency – which has been handling the federal response to Tropical Cyclone Alfred – would be out of the firing line, Davey refused to confirm.

“We’re still very much going through the process of looking at where the Labor government have added new public servants and where there may be redundancies,” she said.

“I’m not going to pre-empt any of that work [but] the National Emergency Management Agency does incredibly important work.”

PM responds to Wayne Swan’s claim Brisbane cyclone threat could be subsiding

By Josefine Ganko

Comments from ALP president Wayne Swan this morning about the immediate threat of Tropical Cyclone Alfred possibly subsiding have caused a bit of a stir, with the PM stepping in to contradict the former treasurer.

Swan spoke on Nine’s Today this morning from his home in Brisbane, where he noted the cyclone was heading north, commenting that “maybe the immediate threat to Brisbane is no longer there.”

Wayne Swan and Anthony Albanese in 2022.Trevor Collens

Asked about the possibility the election could be called on Sunday or Monday, Swan said, “we’ve got to have one in the next couple of months. So it’s not an option not to have one”, before adding that the date would all depend on the cyclone.

Swan continued: “As you’ve seen this morning, it’s turned north now. So it could be a matter of days before we know how it goes. It could strengthen. Although the forecasts this morning are suggesting that it’s weakening. So, we’ve just got to see what the weather does. We’re in the hands of a very unpredictable bunch of circumstances here.”

The PM was asked about Swan’s comments in a press conference in Canberra. He replied that this was a “serious event”.

“What we need to do is hope for the best but prepare for the worst ... This is already having an impact. And the impact with the slowing of Cyclone Alfred in its journey westward to the coast, we should not think that slower means better.”

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Aid carve-outs for human rights sanctions endorsed

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Australians should be able to know why targeted sanctions are being levelled against malicious actors and there should be humanitarian exemptions, a Labor-chaired committee has found.

A review of Australia’s sanctions recommended that the federal government include detailed reasoning when listing sanctions; the foreign minister delivers an annual report to parliament, and exemptions for legitimate humanitarian assistance are in line with a UN Security Council resolution.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong.Alex Ellinghausen

Laws should be expanded to include “threats to international peace and security” and “serious violations of international humanitarian law” as criteria, it recommended.

The autonomous sanctions regime allows the federal government to impose economic restrictions and travel bans on people and countries that exhibit egregious behaviour of international concern, including human rights abuses.

Contravening sanctions carries up to 10 years in prison and substantial fines.

AAP

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