The latest instalment of an ongoing investigation from @ninobucci.bsky.social and I, looking at police use of so-called "less lethal" weapons in Australia. Today -- projectiles, including bean-bag and foam baton rounds.
www.theguardian.com/australia-ne...
In light of Tony Burke's comments today on young people and the distribution or possession of "online radicalised material or violent extremist material"--and that AFP have laid 31 charges since the laws were put in place, 19 of which involved minors--re-upping this from @ninobucci.bsky.social and I
The home affairs minister, the private prison contractor and the secret meeting - ICE-linked private prison operator blamed for catastrophic security failures in Australia’s immigration detention network.
✏️ Chris Knaus & @arielbogle.bsky.social
www.theguardian.com/australia-ne...
We took a look at some of the cases of young people who are being charged with possession of extremist material around Australia, some with serious vulnerabilities.
Federally, 60% of people with that charge are children - a remarkable figure. www.theguardian.com/australia-ne...
On this day in 2019 an Australian right-wing extremist carried out shootings at mosques in Christchurch NZ, killing 51. Seven years on, the impact is still felt globally. We spoke with @arielbogle.bsky.social about why the manifesto still inspires others and opportunities to disrupt that pipeline.
BREAKING: Ben Roberts-Smith, the former Victoria Cross winner and Australian solider, has been arrested and is expected to be charged with five counts of war crime – murder www.theguardian.com/australia-ne...
A new one from us--on a world-first crypto resort to be built right next to the airport in Dili, Timor-Leste. But when reporters visited the site as part of a four-month investigation, they found nothing but palm trees and local children playing football.
www.theguardian.com/world/ng-int...
And we are live!
Massive thanks to everyone who contributed to this. Reading your posts made me so much madder than I ever knew was possible
Today we launched a dive into the "less lethal" weapons some police are using against crowds in Australia—and about which very little is publicly known. These are projectiles that release powder designed to burn the eyes and throat. Flashbang grenades. Teargas. www.theguardian.com/australia-ne...
MEAA stands against racism in the media, entertainment and arts industries and condemns Adelaide Festival’s decision to drop Dr Randa Abdel-Fattah.
meaa.io/45xUCM6
Exclusive: ICE-linked private prison operator blamed for catastrophic security failures in Australia’s immigration detention network
Exclusive: Police forces argue bean-bag and foam baton rounds are less harmful than firearms but the projectiles have been linked to deaths around the world
The Australian terrorist’s propaganda continues to surface in other offenders’ cases, and Muslim leaders say more needs to be done locally to confront Islamophobia
Launchers that shoot ‘bullet-like missiles’, chemical irritants and stinger grenades: experts say these weapons can cause serious injury or even death. But they are deployed by police against crowds w...
www.theguardian.com
www.theguardian.com
Exclusive: Investigation finds alleged Prince Group associates were involved in unusual development in tiny nation on Australia’s doorstep, raising concerns about global spread of online fraud industr...
MEAA condemns Adelaide Festival Board’s decision to cancel a scheduled appearance of Dr Randa Abdel-Fattah at Adelaide Writers’ Week.
www.meaa.org
Ariel Bogle
Ariel Bogle
Sarah Basford Canales
Ariel Bogle
Ariel Bogle
Open Measures
Brian Phillips
Ariel Bogle
Guardian Australia
The bugs, broken apps, and nightmare customer-service bots we can't escape, presented as a blessed and sacred addendum to Pope Leo XIV’s new encyclical on AI
We took a look at some of the cases of young people who are being charged with possession of extremist material around Australia, some with serious vulnerabilities.
Federally, 60% of people with that charge are children - a remarkable figure. www.theguardian.com/australia-ne...
I'm working on a column about the tech annoyances that drive us crazy, and I want it to be as universal as possible, so tell me yours!
E.g. scanning a QR code to read a menu, never receiving the one-time passcode they supposedly texted you, "verify you're human" by IDing tiny motorcycles, etc.