Minister's Private Lunch Sparks Controversy; Neo-Nazi Network Slapped with Counter-Terrorism Sanctions
Minister's Private Lunch Sparks Controversy; Neo-Nazi Network Slapped with Counter-Terrorism Sanctions
NSW Transport Minister, Jo Haylen, apologizes and offers to repay $750 for using a ministerial driver to chauffeur her and friends to a private lunch. The incident has sparked a political storm, with the opposition calling for her resignation. Meanwhile, the Australian government has imposed counter-terrorism sanctions on an online neo-Nazi network that advocates acts of violence. The group, Terrogram, is the first entirely online entity to be sanctioned under Australia's terrorism financing regime. The sanctions come as authorities scramble to respond to a wave of antisemitic attacks in Melbourne and Sydney.