Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll end today’s coverage. We will be back tomorrow with the latest news.
To conclude, here’s a look back at some of the day’s major stories:
- Opposition Leader Angus Taylor said Australia needs to shut the door to anyone trying to bring in hatred and violence, agreeing his party would support the government to pass legislation to make sure a group of Islamic State-linked women and children cannot return.
- Telstra reported a $1.2 billion half-year profit, up 8.1 per cent, as the telco giant reaps the rewards of aggressive cost-cutting that has shed more than 2300 jobs in six months, while warning consumers may face higher mobile bills because of a $7.2 billion government spectrum charge.
- Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan had a tense showdown with a reporter during a media conference outside parliament, when she threatened to stop answering questions if the reporter did not retract a comment suggesting she was “disinterested” in the mounting CFMEU corruption scandal.
Complaints about being cut off from emergency services have surged in Australia following the Optus Triple Zero outage and the discovery of faulty mobile phone hardware. The Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman revealed the growing number of mobile phone complaints on Wednesday in a report that also showed a rise in concerns about internet outages and claims for compensation.
A second man was arrested and charged over online threats made towards federal MPs. Australian Federal Police confirmed a 51-year-old man from Queanbeyan in NSW will appear in court in April after an investigation by the National Security Investigations team into threatening posts on a social media platform.
- And overseas, at least eight skiers have died in an avalanche in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains, and a ninth is presumed dead, making the disaster one of the deadliest single avalanches in US history.
Thanks again for joining us. This is Isabel McMillan signing off.