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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Charlotte Graham-McLay

Morning Mail: Chinese academic surveillance, Rubiales to resign, Russia’s win at G20

The visiting academic had his phone confiscated and had to abandon planned meetings.
A visiting Chinese academic had his phone confiscated and had to abandon planned meetings. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

Good morning. A Chinese academic visiting Australia on a research trip had his accommodation raided by Asio and the federal police, and was offered $2,000 in cash by a man purporting to be from “the federal government” for information on his networks and contacts in China. The academic left the country early after being surveilled across the country and said the episode was “heavy-handed and counter-productive.”

Meanwhile, mourning begins in Morocco after more than 2,000 people were killed in an earthquake, and a NSW man is told his tiny house will be demolished – even if it would leave him homeless. And India’s G20 summit is over, ending with a win for Russia.

Australia

Chinese premier Li Qiang (right) met with prime minister Anthony Albanese last week.
Chinese premier Li Qiang (right) met with Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese last week. Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock

World

Friday’s 6.8-magnitude quake in Morocco had an epicentre below a remote cluster of mountainous villages 45 miles south of Marrakech.
Friday’s 6.8-magnitude quake in Morocco had an epicentre below a remote cluster of mountainous villages south of Marrakech. Photograph: Dia images via AP

Full Story

A person uses a smartphone to record a voice message in Los Angeles. The biggest peril of artificial intelligence, experts say, is its ability to blur the boundaries between reality and fiction.
A person uses a smartphone to record a voice message. The biggest peril of artificial intelligence, experts say, is its ability to blur the boundaries between reality and fiction. Photograph: Chris Delmas/AFP/Getty Images

The chilling rise of AI scams

Criminals are cloning voices and making calls to trick victims into sending them money. How can they be stopped? Oliver Devane, a senior researcher at the computer security company McAfee, explains to Michael Safi how criminals are exploiting artificial intelligence to trick their victims – and how we can protect ourselves from falling for it.

In-depth

Elizabeth ‘Biz’ Bell, head of Wildlife Management International, which helps rid islands of invasive species and create predator-free zones.
Elizabeth ‘Biz’ Bell, head of Wildlife Management International, which helps rid islands of invasive species and create predator-free zones. Photograph: Jim Tannock/The Guardian

In a report this week, the UN warned that invasive species are costing the world at least $423bn every year and have become a leading threat to the diversity of life on Earth. Honed in New Zealand and exported globally, Elizabeth Bell’s techniques for creating predator-free zones are allowing native species to thrive again on islands from the Caribbean to the UK.

Visit any elimination project around the world, she says, and you’ll typically find a New Zealander involved somewhere. “They get the Kiwis in to kill everything,” Bell says, laughing, “and then do the fun stuff themselves.”

Not the news

‘If we only had a few weeks, months, a year or 10 years to live, what would we do with our time?’
‘If we only had a few weeks, months, a year or 10 years to live, what would we do with our time?’ Composite: Alamy

Our lives are busier and more complex than ever. From awareness of bodily sensation to active contemplation, Nadine Levy explores how can we use mindfulness to get in touch with what truly matters.

If you want a life rich in meaning, she says, you must first learn how to do nothing.

The world of sport

Coco Gauff after winning her first grand slam title, the US Open, following her victory against Aryna Sabalenka.
Coco Gauff after winning her first grand slam title, the US Open, following her victory against Aryna Sabalenka. Photograph: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

Media roundup

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk will face a divided caucus today ahead of a critical sitting week, according to the Courier Mail. The ABC travelled through the country speaking to voters about the voice referendum. NSW police are threatening to stop attending emergency calls relating to mental health incidents in protest against what their union calls “hostile” treatment at coronial inquests, the Daily Telegraph reports. The Age reports that Victorians back a pokies crackdown.

What’s happening today

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Brain teaser

And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day – with plenty more on the Guardian’s Puzzles app for iOS and Android. Until tomorrow.

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