The Guardian Australia

Afternoon Update: Australian killed in South Korea crowd crush identified; Lula wins in Brazil

- Antoun Issa

Hello and welcome to the new Afternoon Update. I’m Antoun Issa, the newsletter­s editor at Guardian Australia, and I’ll be keeping you up to speed with the day’s news every weekday. To get straight into the news, the royal commission into the robodebt scandal is already unearthing important details only one day into its inquiry. The revelation? That a government department was aware of legal concerns around the scheme way back in 2014 – almost five years before the Coalition government deemed it unlawful. The botched Centrelink scheme saw hundreds of thousands of people issued unlawful social security debts.

Top news

Australian identified in Seoul deaths |The Australian who was killed during a crowd crush at Halloween festivitie­s in South Korea has been identified as 23year-old Sydney woman Grace Rached. The crowd crush caused the death of more than 150 people in Itaewon, Seoul on Saturday night. Two other Australian­s who Rached was with are now being treated in intensive care.

Robodebt inquiry |On the first day of hearings, it was revealed the Department of Social Services and the Department of Human Services had sought internal legal advice “before and during its implementa­tion” of the robodebt scheme in 2015. That advice “raised significan­t questions about the legality of the scheme”.

Victoria backs netball |The Victorian government has signed a $15m, fourand-a-half year sponsorshi­p deal with Netball Australia, replacing Hancock Prospectin­g’s now defunct sponsorshi­p agreement for the same amount.

DoD cyber-attack |A communicat­ions platform used by the Department of Defence has been hit by a ransomware attack. The government says it’s taking the attack on the ForceNet service – which is held by an external provider – “very seriously”. Up to 40,000 records were potentiall­y targeted in the attack.

Queensland schools review |Queensland has announced an independen­t review of the accreditat­ion framework for independen­t schools following backlash against the actions of large Queensland Christian schools, particular­ly with regards to treatment of LGBTQ+ students.

Lula wins |Brazil’s veteran leftist Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has sealed an astonishin­g victory against the farright incumbent, Jair Bolsonaro, in one of the country’s most significan­t elections. With 99.97% of votes counted, Silva, a former factory worker who became Brazil’s first working-class president exactly 20 years ago, had secured 50.9% of the vote. Bolsonaro, a firebrand who was elected in 2018, received 49.1%. World leaders were quick to congratula­te Lula out of fears Bol

sonaro might dispute the legitimacy of the results.

Greta skips UN summit |Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg will be skipping next month’s Cop27 talks in Egypt, criticisin­g the global summit as a forum for “greenwashi­ng”. She joins the new UK PM, Rishi Sunak, on the sidelines, who angered world leaders when he decided not to attend the summit to focus on “other pressing domestic commitment­s”.

Malcolm X |New York City will pay US$26m for the wrongful conviction­s of Muhammad Aziz and the late Khalil Islam in the 1965 assassinat­ion of Malcolm X. A Manhattan judge last year dismissed the conviction­s of Aziz, now 84, and Islam, who died in 2009, after both men spent decades behind bars.

Crimea drone attack | Dramatic footage has been released showing Russia’s Black Sea flagship vessel, the Admiral Makarov, damaged and possibly disabled during an audacious Ukrainian drone attack over the weekend on the Crimean port of Sevastopol. Watch the 1m29s video.

Full Story

The rise of Europe’s far-right parties

The leader of the Brothers of Italy party, Giorgia Meloni, was sworn in this month as the country’s prime minister. She has pledged to crack down on migrant boats and limit abortion rights, and opposes same-sex marriage and parenting. Why are far-right parties becoming more influentia­l in European politics? Jon Henley, our Europe correspond­ent, takes a closer look in this 29minute episode.

What they said …

***

“We will fight for zero deforestat­ion in the Amazon … Brazil and the planet need the Amazon alive.” – Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil’s president-elect.

After four years of far-right rule, Lula da Silva said his priorities are poverty, housing and the Amazon. Andrew Downie, writing from São Paulo, analyses the challenges ahead for the leftist leader.

In numbers

The crackdown last week, dubbed Operation Athena, led to 86 arrests.

Before bed read

Is the Melbourne cup the race that stops or segments the nation? Even before Covid stopped the crowds turning up to Flemington, attendance numbers were dwindling. There’s no doubt in recent years the event has become increasing­ly controvers­ial – and not just because of animal welfare and gambling concerns.

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 ?? Photograph: Erica Martin/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Brazil elections: Supporters of President-elect Lula celebrate victory in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Photograph: Erica Martin/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shuttersto­ck Brazil elections: Supporters of President-elect Lula celebrate victory in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
 ?? Photograph: ?? Sydney production assistant Grace Rached, 23, was one of the victims from the crowd crush in South Korea.
Photograph: Sydney production assistant Grace Rached, 23, was one of the victims from the crowd crush in South Korea.

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