Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Paul Gallagher

Morning Mail: Serco’s secret algorithm, abuse claims over Gaza raid, Greens’ demand on offshore gas

Nauroze Anees at a park in Lahore, Pakistan, in March.
Nauroze Anees spent 1,490 days in immigration detention in Australia. Photograph: Khaula Jamil/The Guardian

Good morning. We lead today with a Guardian investigation which has found that the lives of detainees in Australia’s immigration detention centres are controlled by a secret rating system that is opaque and often riddled with errors.

Meanwhile, the Albanese government wants Greens support over vehicle emissions standards, but the Greens say for that to happen Labor will need to back down on proposals to benefit the offshore gas industry.

And: there are calls for an investigation into alleged abuses against Palestinian medical staff held in detention after an Israeli raid on a Gaza hospital.

Australia

World

Full Story

The fight to make EVs more affordable

Last month the government unveiled its plan for a vehicle efficiency standard to incentivise carmakers to supply more low- and zero-emission cars. Adam Morton tells Nour Haydar about the plan to make electric vehicles more affordable – and why some carmakers and the Coalition are standing in the way.

In-depth

Nauroze Anees spent more than 1,000 days in a Serco-run immigration detention centre in Australia, but for most of that time, he had no idea he was the subject of a Security Risk Analysis Tool, or SRAT, that determined where he was accommodated and whether he was handcuffed outside the centre.

The secretive SRAT attempts to calculate a detainee’s “risk” for violence, escape or self-harm. But lawyers, immigration insiders and government reports say the tool regularly rates people as high risk based on “unwarranted” escalations and inaccurate information – with devastating consequences.

Anees said: “Serco is essentially the judge, jury and executioner.”

Not the news

The Melbourne Theatre Company’s 37 – by Trawlwoolway playwright Nathan Maynard – follows two Aboriginal players in a country team during the Adam Goodes era. Goodes left the AFL in disgust in 2015, and more and more Indigenous players are alleging that the AFL failed to protect them from racist abuse and discrimination. In the wake of the hugely disappointing Indigenous voice to parliament debate, this play is terrific, thrilling – and a wake-up call, writes Tim Byrne.

The world of sport

Media roundup

More than one in four residential properties purchased in NSW, Victoria and Queensland last year were paid for entirely with cash by older Australians – highlighting disparities in the property market, reports ABC News. Regional communities in Victoria prone to patchy electricity and power outages during tourist peaks will have their supply shored up under a first round of neighbourhood batteries, reports the Age. The latest snapshot of school profile data reveals Sydney’s western and northern suburbs have recorded the biggest enrolment growth in the past decade – with more schools surging past the 3,000 student mark, reports the Sydney Morning Herald.

What’s happening today

  • New South Wales | Hearings set to continue in Sydney in the royal commission into defence and veteran suicide.

  • Victoria | Public hearings scheduled in Tullamarine for the Senate inquiry into supermarket pricing.

  • ACT | Greece’s former finance minister Yanis Varoufakis is scheduled to address the National Press Club in Canberra.

Sign up

If you would like to receive this Morning Mail update to your email inbox every weekday, sign up here. And finish your day with a three-minute snapshot of the day’s main news. Sign up for our Afternoon Update newsletter here.

Prefer notifications? If you’re reading this in our app, just click here and tap “Get notifications” on the next screen for an instant alert when we publish every morning.

Brain teaser

And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.