Hundreds paddle out in memory of 12-year-old Sydney shark attack victim

Hundreds of people have participated in a paddle-out in memory of a 12-year-old boy killed after being bitten by a shark last weekend.

Nico Antic sustained critical injuries after he was bitten near a popular swimming spot at Vaucluse in Sydney’s east, and died.

In memory of the 12-year-old, his school, Rose Bay Secondary College, organised a community paddle out at North Bondi.

Here are a few scenes from the shore on Sunday morning:

Sydney bathers and surfers paddle out to honour the life of 12-year-old shark victim Nico Antic

Sydney bathers and surfers paddle out to honour the life of 12-year-old shark victim Nico Antic. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAP

Surfers formed a ring in the water off North Bondi beach

Surfers formed a ring in the water off North Bondi beach. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAP

People gathered to watch the event from the beach

People gathered on the beach to watch the event. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAP

Antic was remembered as a ‘happy, vibrant and social young person’

Antic was remembered as a ‘happy, vibrant and social young person’. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAP

The event was organised by Nico’s school, Rose Bay Secondary

The event was organised by Nico’s school, Rose Bay Secondary. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAPShare

Updated at 19.10 EST

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SA Premier Peter Malinauskas expected to enjoy comfortable win at next state election

South Australian Labor tipped to take the stand in another landslide with the state’s Liberal Party.

With the state’s Liberal Party largely missing in action, Adelaide University Emeritus Professor of Politics Clem Macintyre said the Labor Premier doesn’t face much of a challenge.

The opposition party, she said, has been “at sixes and sevens” for most of his term.

Opposition Leader Ashton Hurn was thrust into the Liberal leadership in December, months from the March 21 election, left to pick up the pieces of a party that failed to recover after Labor turfed them out in 2022, winning 27 lower house seats to 16.

Labor has since gained two more seats at by-elections, snaring former permier Steven Marshall’s electorate of Dunstan in 2023, and Black, which was held by his successor David Spiers, in 2024.

Speirs quit parliament in October 2024 and was convicted on drug supply charges last year.

He was replaced by Vincent Tarzia, who trailed Malinauskas 58 per cent to 19 per cent as preferred premier in October’s DemosAU opinion poll, before he stepped down in December.

Hurn, 35, who is the member for the Barossa Valley seat of Schubert, is now one of five women leaders of the Liberal party at federal, state or territory level.

Macintyre says she expects the election will result in fewer Liberal MPs in the lower house “certainly, there’s unlikely to be many, if any, from metropolitan Adelaide”.

Flinders University associate lecturer in public policy Josh Sunman said the oppositions light policy offering stands in contrast to the big announcements offered by Labor.

Though vulnerable on the state debt, ramping in the state’s hospitals and the Premier’s intervention into Adelaide Writers Week, Sunman suggested the Liberals have been unable to capitalise.

An unusual factor in this election is the number of MPs on criminal charges.

In addition to Spiers, three former Liberals-turned-independents found themselves before the courts last year.

The state election will be held on 21 March 2026.

AAP

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Attempted firebomb attack in Sydney’s south west

New South Wales police are investigating after a house was firebombed in south-west Sydney overnight.

Emergency services responded to reports that glass firebombs had been thrown at a Condell Park home shortly after 10.30pm on Saturday night.

Police were informed that two glass bottles, possibly containing petrol, were thrown at the house, causing damage to a window.

The bottles shattered on impact but failed to ignite. A third bottle was found in a bog at the front of the premises and has been seized for forensic examination.

There were no reports of any other structural damage to the house or injuries to any person.

Police believe the attempted attack was targeted.

A crime scene was established and examined by specialist police.

Immediately after the attempted attack, a scooter with a rider was seen riding north along Gallipoli Street.

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Updated at 20.46 EST

NSW Greens to move bill to let councils better regulate berry industry as it continues rapid expansion

Cate Faehrmann, a Greens member of the New South Wales legislative council, will move a private member’s bill next week to give councils more power to regulate blueberry and other berry farms, which are expanding throughout the mid-north coast, leading to serious frictions with other landholders.

Separately, the state Labor government is considering an inquiry into alleged worker abuse in the region. Most states regulate labour hire companies, which serve as intermediaries between farmers and seasonal workers, but NSW does not.

A blueberry farm near Warrell Creek and Gaagal Wanggaan (South Beach) national park on the NSW mid north coast. Photograph: Zahn Pithers

Guardian Australia has reported on allegations of underpayment, poor living conditions and exploitation, particularly of workers who arrived on the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility (Palm) scheme but left their employers, often allegedly as a result of worker exploitation.

Faehrmann’s bill aims to address the environmental impact of intensive berry farming.

For more on this story, read the full report by Guardian Australia’s Anne Davies:

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Updated at 21.03 EST

Heat eases in southeast but WA still red hot

The heatwave that brought sweltering temperatures to most of Australia’s southern states has eased, but WA has been warned to brace for more hot weather.

Adelaide is marching towards its driest summer since records began.

With absolutely no rain in January, the city has marked its first dry January since 2019 and just the eighth dating back to 1839.

It has also been an exceptionally hot month in the South Australian capital, with minimum temperatures running 1C above the long-term average and maximums 3.6C above average.

People cooling off at Lake Parramatta in Western Sydney last month. Photograph: Blake Sharp-Wiggins/The Guardian

Adelaide’s driest summer was 1905/06 with just 4mm in total, according to Weatherzone.

Only 2.8mm fell in December, so after a rainless January, that stands as the city’s tally for the 2025/26 summer.

That trend is set to continue, with the Bureau of Meteorology predicting another week of dry, warm conditions.

Sunday should give a much-needed reprieve for those affected by the searing heat of last week, before the mercury hovers around 30C for the next seven days.

Parts of NSW and Victoria are also on alert for fires, with authorities issuing a total fire ban in Upper Central West Plains and Eastern Riverina regions and the north-east region, respectively.

Perth residents will probably endure 37C and 39C on Sunday and Monday as their prolonged heatwave tails off.

In its long-range forecast, the bureau predicts warmer days and nights over the coming months, with increased extreme heat risk and no clear wet or dry trend for February to April.

Overall, the next week provides some cooler, calmer conditions for most of Australia’s southeast after a sweltering, record-smashing week where the mercury surged towards 50C.

AAP

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Updated at 20.15 EST

Bushfire smoke blankets Sydney and Central Coast

Fires burning north of Newcastle have caused a blanket of smoke to drift down NSW and across the Central Coast and Greater Sydney.

The Rural fire service said bushfires burning at Oyster Cove and Nerong were responsible for the smoke, with authorities expecting it to linger throughout the morning before a wind change breaks it up.

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Updated at 20.29 EST

NDIS workers are being stalked, harassed and assaulted while ‘urgent’ safety reforms take three years to enact

In the years he has worked for the National Disability Insurance Agency, Lawrence (not his real name) has narrowly escaped violence on multiple occasions.

He managed to avoid being beaten up at a hospital, was present when an angry NDIS participant threw a table through a glass window at a service centre, and witnessed another participant try to smash glass and run over staff in their power wheelchair.

He has been filmed and livestreamed while doing his job, received death threats, regularly taken calls from distressed participants who have threatened suicide, and had service centres he has worked at locked down or evacuated.

His experiences reflect those heard during a 2023 government-commissioned review into the safety of NDIA staff, conducted by Graham Ashton. It was initiated after a Services Australia staff member was stabbed at a service centre that houses both a Services Australia and an NDIS office.

The review made 36 urgent recommendations to improve the safety and security of frontline NDIA staff.

Guardian Australia can reveal that despite this review being presented to NDIA management in May 2024, it took the government 15 months before it shared it with staff and the union.

For more on this story, read the full report by Guardian Australia’s Kate Lyons:

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Updated at 19.37 EST

Mark Butler questions Angus Taylor’s frontbench position after secret Liberal leadership meeting

The federal health minister, Mark Butler, has added his two cents to the internal turmoil within the former Coalition, saying he doesn’t understand how Angus Taylor remains in the shadow cabinet after a secret meeting to discuss a future Liberal leadership challenge.

Speaking to Sky News on Sunday, Butler spruiked the government’s increase to hospital funding after two decades of negotiations with the states and defended its work on the NDIS.

Mark Butler. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Asked about how things will shake out on Monday, Butler said he expected “it’s going to be a shambles on the other side of the parliament.”

I don’t understand how Angus Taylor is still on the frontbench. I mean he is so obviously putting together a leadership challenge.

At the risk of sounding overenthusiastic about Labor’s good fortune, Butler said he couldn’t predict how events would play out.

There’s a small opposition now of barely 28 members, and that is split right down the middle between Sussan Ley supporters Angus Taylor supporters, so frankly how they’re going to be able to pull all of that mess together to provide, really, the job that they have to do for the Australian people, which is to present an alternative in the parliament to the government, is frankly beyond me.

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Updated at 19.28 EST

Hundreds paddle out in memory of 12-year-old Sydney shark attack victim

Hundreds of people have participated in a paddle-out in memory of a 12-year-old boy killed after being bitten by a shark last weekend.

Nico Antic sustained critical injuries after he was bitten near a popular swimming spot at Vaucluse in Sydney’s east, and died.

In memory of the 12-year-old, his school, Rose Bay Secondary College, organised a community paddle out at North Bondi.

Here are a few scenes from the shore on Sunday morning:

Sydney bathers and surfers paddle out to honour the life of 12-year-old shark victim Nico Antic. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAPSurfers formed a ring in the water off North Bondi beach. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAPPeople gathered on the beach to watch the event. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAPAntic was remembered as a ‘happy, vibrant and social young person’. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAPThe event was organised by Nico’s school, Rose Bay Secondary. Photograph: Sarah Wilson/AAPShare

Updated at 19.10 EST

Could One Nation be a genuine threat to Australia’s conservative parties?

A week or so out from last year’s federal election, a narrative emerged offering a glimmer of hope for the Coalition’s flailing campaign.

With the popularity of One Nation rising, preferences flowing from Pauline Hanson’s supporters could help the Liberals topple Labor in working-class seats in the outer suburbs and regions.

Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party has become more palatable to voters, many of whom are disillusioned with the major parties, political experts say. Photograph: Christopher Hopkins/The Guardian

“Aunty Pauline is now acceptable,” a Liberal insider was quoted as saying in the Australian Financial Review, implying Hanson had become palatable to more voters and her rightwing party an electoral weapon for the Coalition.

The narrative never materialised as the opposition leader Peter Dutton’s suburban strategy spectacularly tanked on polling day.

Nine months on, a One Nation narrative still surrounds the Liberals and Nationals.

But now it tells of a genuine electoral opponent.

After years on the extreme fringes of Australian politics, pollsters and political insiders say financial stress and disillusionment with the major parties – particularly the Coalition – is pushing Hanson’s hardline brand of rightwing populism into the mainstream.

But how far can One Nation go in reshaping the political landscape?

For the answer to that question read the full report by Guardian Australia’s Dan Jervis-Bardy:

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Updated at 20.40 EST

Canavan says toppling Ley won’t reunify Coalition

The Liberal and National split would not be resolved by replacing Sussan Ley as Liberal leader, Matt Canavan says.

I don’t think that’s the issue. I’ve worked with Susan very strongly in the past. I think she’s done a good job over the past year.

The Nationals senator said the issue lay elsewhere.

There’s just one problem here, Andrew. And that is, that of course is that if we’re going to be in a coalition with the Liberal party, we have to have put forward who we’d like to serve in the shadow ministry. And as a result of the vote last week and the fallout from that, Sussan Ley said no.

Clarifying later, Canavan said:

I don’t think she should have sacked those people.

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Updated at 18.30 EST

Canavan confident Littleproud can survive leadership challenge

Canavan said he understood some people’s concern over the split and their desire to see a reunified Coalition, but added that the break allowed the Nationals to take an informed position on the government’s antisemitism legislation “in less than a week”.

The Senator said he was “still scratching my head about why we had to split” over a “difference of opinion on this particular issue”.

We will continue to work together I’m sure with other people in the parliament. I think it would be best to do so in a coalition.

He said he expected the Nationals leader, David Littleproud, to survive an expected leadership challenge on Monday.

I’m pretty sure he’ll have the confidence of the room tomorrow.

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Updated at 18.20 EST

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