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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Martin Farrer

Morning Mail: Noémie Fox wins gold, a botched murder investigation, global stock markets tumble

Noémie Fox is congratulated by her sister Jess after winning gold in the kayak cross.
Noémie Fox is congratulated by her sister Jess after winning gold in the kayak cross. Photograph: Molly Darlington/Reuters

Morning everyone. Australia’s Olympic gold rush continued overnight in joyous fashion when paddler Noémie Fox won the kayak cross, prompting her ecstatic sister Jess – a double gold medallist in Paris – to jump in the water to celebrate with her.

A Guardian investigation has looked into a botched murder investigation that left a teen in jail for a year. Read more below.

And there is plenty of news from overseas, where the Bangladesh PM has resigned and fled the country, stock markets tumbled amid fears of a US recession, and there are rumours Kamala Harris is close to announcing her VP pick.

Australia

  • Fox gold | Paddler Noémie Fox has capped off a remarkable Games for her family by following sister Jess in winning gold. The 27-year-old delivered in the kayak cross, a combative format of the canoe slalom making its Olympic debut.

  • Defamation trial | Linda Reynolds said she chose to meet with Brittany Higgins in the room her former staffer had allegedly been raped in a few days earlier because it was the only private space available in her ministerial office suite, a court has heard.

  • Betting blast | The government has come under fire for consulting betting, sport and media companies ahead of gambling harm advocates, as it prepares to respond to a plan that would ban all gambling ads.

  • Rental move | Rental property application platforms would be prohibited from asking prospective tenants in New South Wales to pay for their own background checks under proposed new laws.

  • Petrol pledge | A re-elected Queensland Labor government would set up state-owned petrol stations, cap daily fuel price rises and take over operation of council buses from local government, premier Steven Miles will announce today.

World

  • Veep’s veep | Kamala Harris has narrowed her search for a Democratic vice-presidential running mate to two candidates – Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro and Minnesota governor Tim Walz – according to reports.

  • Shares plunge | Shares in New York and London have fallen heavily amid a global stock market rout triggered by fears of a recession in the US, pointing to more potential losses when the ASX opens later today.

  • Bangladesh crisis | The prime minister of Bangladesh, Sheikh Hasina, has resigned and left the country by helicopter amid unrest about job quotas, which has seen some of the worst violence since the birth of the country more than 50 years ago.

  • ‘No justification’ | Downing Street has criticised comments by Elon Musk who posted on X that “civil war is inevitable” under a video of violent riots in Liverpool. Here’s why people have been rioting across England.

  • Iran warning | Iran says it has a moral duty to punish Israel for what it sees as its “adventurism” and law-breaking in assassinating Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas leader, in the Iranian capital as tensions builds about the prospect of a Middle East war.

Full Story

Is Australia stuck with an airline duopoly?

After the demise of Rex Airlines, our transport expert Elias Visontay speaks to Tamsin Rose about how a lack of competition in the skies means that consumers will continue paying more for less.

In-depth

A 15-year-old boy was charged with murder and spent almost a year in custody after Victoria police used a process described by a judge as “corrupted” to gather identification evidence against him, a Guardian investigation has found.

The case then collapsed during a pre-trial hearing in which the judge said she was “incredulous” that the prosecution was pushing ahead with it despite flaws in the evidence used to identify the boy as the murderer.

Victoria police have denied the investigation into the alleged murder of 17-year-old Aguer Akech was improperly conducted.

Not the news

Eric Beecher, once editor in chief of News Corp’s Melbourne newspapers, has decided to spill the beans on his time in the Murdoch empire. In his new book, The Men Who Killed the News, Beecher describes the organisation as a “medieval fiefdom” where editors learn to take directions from the top by “osmosis”.

The world of sport

Media roundup

No sector of the economy was spared as the ASX plunged on fears of a possible US recession, the Fin Review reports, while the Age reckons the stock market turmoil means the RBA is more likely to cut rates at its monetary policy meeting today. The Cairns Post reports on the hunt for a crocodile suspected of taking a man on a fishing trip near Cooktown, and carries footage of a large saltie in the area before the attack.

What’s happening today

  • Economy | Reserve Bank announcement on interest rates at 2.30pm.

  • Tasmania | Nicolaas Bester to appear in a Hobart court accused of harassing former Australian of the Year Grace Tame online.

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Brain teaser

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

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