Good afternoon. Lidia Thorpe has been removed from the Great Hall of Parliament House after yelling “this is not your land” at King Charles.
The king had just finished addressing MPs and senators when the independent senator approached the stage, having earlier turned her back on the royal couple during the national anthem.
“You committed genocide against our people. Give us our land back. Give us what you stole from us – our bones, our skulls, our babies, our people,” shouted Thorpe, who is a fiercely outspoken advocate for Indigenous rights.
As security officers escorted her out of the hall into the foyer, Thorpe, who was dressed in a long possum skin coat, could be heard shouting: “Fuck the colony.”
The former prime minister Tony Abbott called it “unfortunate political exhibitionism” while Dick Smith said it was a “wonderful part of our democracy” that Thorpe “won’t be put in jail”.
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In pictures
Hephner the alpaca meets King Charles
At the Australian War Memorial, Canberrans lined up to catch a glimpse of the king and queen’s first stop in the nation’s capital. One of those in line was Robert Fletcher and his alpaca Hephner, who was apparently on his best behaviour – so much so that he was allowed into the war memorial to say hello.
What they said …
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“As I walked out, a boy who was lying on the floor of a cell he had been in for five days called out, ‘God bless.’ He was all alone, quiet and subdued. He shouldn’t be in a watch house; it won’t make things better for any of us.”
Reflecting on a visit to the Cairns watch house, Aimee McVeigh, the chief executive of the Queensland Council of Social Service, writes that the LNP’s “adult crime, adult time” election slogan won’t make Queenslanders safer – “we need to fight fear with facts”.
In numbers
The federal court ruled that three baggage workers sacked by Qantas at the start of the pandemic should receive $30,000, $40,000 and $100,000 in compensation for hardship and distress caused by the airline. The test cases will inform compensation payouts for the other almost 1,700 workers whose jobs were found to be illegally outsourced, with the total bill now expected to exceed $100m.
Before bed read
Three things with Claudia Chan Shaw: ‘Pull out a Bic four-colour pen in a meeting and it’s a real icebreaker’
In Guardian Australia’s weekly interview about objects, the TV host and collector shares her “daggy” stationery – and her childhood obsession with Humphrey Bogart.
Daily word game
Today’s starter word is: LEV. You have five goes to get the longest word including the starter word. Play Wordiply.
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