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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Alan Vaarwerk

Afternoon Update: questions over exploding pagers in Lebanon; CFMEU rallies in Sydney and Melbourne; and the Murdoch succession battle deepens

People gather outside a hospital in Beirut
People gather outside a hospital in Beirut after more than 3,000 people were wounded when the pagers they used to communicate exploded across Lebanon. Photograph: Mohamed Azakir/Reuters

Good afternoon. More details, reactions and questions are emerging after the unprecedented attack against militant group Hezbollah, in which thousands of pagers were remotely and simultaneously detonated across Lebanon, killing at least nine people and wounding almost 3,000. Lebanon’s health minister, Firass Abiad, said a young girl was among the dead, and that at least 200 people had critical injuries.

The Taiwanese manufacturer linked to the pagers that exploded as part of the attack has said the devices were made by a company in Europe. “The product was not ours. It was only that it had our brand on it,” said Hsu Ching-Kuang, the founder of electronics company Gold Apollo.

In Australia, the Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi said the attack “is exactly the type of sickening warfare people in Naarm Melbourne were protesting against”, while the shadow home affairs minister, James Paterson, said “probably every intelligence agency in the world is waking up this morning and asking themselves, how do we stop this happening to us?”

Top news

  • CFMEU supporters hit the streets | Victorian building unions are threatening a strike of up to three days if employers don’t stop a “sustained attack” on pay and conditions, the head of the electricians’ union has said, as members rallied in Sydney and Melbourne against the placing of the CFMEU into administration.

  • ‘Not the actions of a friend’ | The federal opposition has criticised a video appearing to show a Chinese military aircraft in a “dangerous” interception with an Australian surveillance plane in 2022, with the shadow defence minister, Andrew Hastie, calling on Anthony Albanese to raise the matter with Xi Jinping.

  • Murdoch succession battle deepens | As a secret legal case over the future control of News Corp is heard in the US, investors are seeking to loosen share voting powers that allow Rupert Murdoch and his heirs to maintain a firm grip on the media empire.

In pictures

Australia’s farming shopfront: Henty Machinery Field Days

More than 50,000 people are expected to descend on the town in southern New South Wales for the largest agricultural event in Australia. More than 800 exhibitors are spread across a 104-hectare specially built site for the three-day field event, which organisers say connects agricultural businesses and farmers who use their products and technology to increase efficiency, profitability and sustainability.

What they said …

***

“Social media companies know very well they directly benefit from our anger, divisiveness and the valuable time we spend on their platforms. So, until they own responsibility, I see the government’s proposed ban as a small but significant step.”

Writing for Guardian Australia, Chanel Contos, the founder of Teach Us Consent, says that until social media giants take responsibility for the harm they cause, she supports the government’s proposed ban for children.

In numbers

Japan’s long campaign to appoint more women to senior roles in business and industry has suffered a blow, after a survey found only 0.8% of top firms listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange were led by women. The proportion of senior women in business remains low even under the government’s wider definition of “executive”, which includes corporate officers, as well as directors, auditors and executive officers.

Before bed read

Stamps, sticks and stories: looking for traces of baseball in North Korea

Earlier this year, when a baseball team made up of young North Korean defectors toured the US, American and South Korean media reported that baseball was “unheard of” in the North. But like a trail of breadcrumbs, there are signs this most cherished of American sports may still be played in a country that calls itself the “biggest enemy” of the US.

Daily word game

Today’s starter word is: FALL. You have five goes to get the longest word including the starter word. Play Wordiply.

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