Address to the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry Gala Dinner, Canberra

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

Mark, thanks for your leadership and the kind introduction.

Andrew, congratulations on clocking up 4 years in the role now and thanks for the invitation to join you and your members.

Let’s acknowledge together the elders, customs and culture of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri people on their traditional lands.

I also want to shout‑out some of my Ministerial colleagues joining us tonight – Murray, Anne, Patrick and Andrew.

As well as the Shadow Treasurer and other members and senators from across the parliament.

To all the ACCI members here – thank you all for the jobs and opportunities you create around the country.

Thank you for the important role local chambers play in every community represented here in the parliament.

And thanks for the chance to speak to you over dinner about 3 things that occupy almost all of my time as Treasurer.

Building on momentum in the private sector.

Making progress on the directions we set at the reform roundtable.

Against a backdrop of serious and persistent global volatility.


There are a number of ways to understand this volatility but just consider, for a moment, commodity prices.

Each week Treasurers get a simple page summarising movements in 8 different commodities.

So, by my count that brief has landed on my desk 179 times now.

Usually, treasurers look for the iron ore price at the top of the page first.

About 96 bucks this week, not bad.

Then it’s gas prices, about halfway down.

Other times it’s oil, particularly when conflict in the Middle East flares or tensions in the Strait of Hormuz escalate.

But there’s one commodity that until this week was missing from that weekly briefing that I’ve been watching most closely lately – and that’s gold.

Gold is up almost 50 per cent in the past year.

More than $12 billion has been funnelled into gold‑backed funds in one week of this month alone.

A year ago, an ounce of gold was about US$2,800.

It took 169 days for it to climb to US$3,300, and 167 days to climb a further US$500.

The most recent US$500 price jump took just 20 days – and that progress has almost unwound with the big fall in gold over the past fortnight.

We watch this with interest because, historically, spikes in the price of gold have been a symptom of a big event or more substantial global economic shock.

In the late 2000s it was the GFC and its aftermath driving the price of gold bullion up by 50 per cent.

Three decades before that, the ‘Nixon shock’ kicked off the biggest gold bull run in history – a 19‑fold price increase in just a decade.

It all started when Nixon ended the gold standard in 1971.

It was fuelled by 2 oil crises in the Middle East and sustained by a global battle with inflation.

Familiar signs of uncertainty and volatility are visible again across the global economy today.

Conflicts abroad.

governments everywhere managing the aftershocks of an international spike in inflation.

Global shifts in trade.


The gold price is one way to monitor global volatility but not the only way – we see it in each of the major risk indexes and in markets around the world.

This uncertainty was the major focus of my international discussions with counterparts and some of the world’s largest investors earlier this month.

Over 7 days, across 3 cities and 2 continents.

What came through clearly in almost every conversation was that risks to the global economic outlook are accumulating –from every angle, all at once.

Geopolitical tensions.

Strains and stresses in financial markets.

And the complex transitions underway in our economies, across energy, technology and demography.

Behind the scenes, leaders around the world are watching nervously.

Investors are cautious.

Capital is jumpy.

And uncertainty is more persistent.


This volatility has been normalised but not neutralised.

So far, global growth has outperformed the low expectations laid out in forecasts from the IMF and others earlier in the year.

But it’s not yet clear whether the world economy will continue to muddle through or if there will be a sharp correction.

The atmosphere in some markets is febrile – whether it’s the wild swings in gold, equity valuations, or on debt markets.

Regardless of what plays out, Australia faces these challenges from a position of relative strength.

We’ve got a lot coming at us from around the world, but a lot going for us in our own economy too.

Security and stability for investors, and geography.

Emerging advantages thanks to abundant wind, solar and critical minerals.

Expertise in AI and data centres.

The skills and experience of our workers.

When you look around the world, our macroeconomic and fiscal fundamentals hold us in good stead too.

We know there’s so much more to do, but so far we’ve seen:

The biggest nominal improvement in the budget in a parliamentary term.

Back‑to‑back surpluses in our first 2 years and a smaller deficit in our third year, avoiding $188 billion in debt.

Just this week, global rating agency Fitch reaffirmed our triple‑A credit rating – meaning Australia is still one of only 9 countries to be rated triple‑A by all 3 major rating agencies.

The lowest average unemployment rate of any government in 50 years and more than 1.1 million new jobs since May 2022.

Inflation did tick up today, but underlying inflation is still at the top of the RBA’s target band.

Today’s result was higher than we’d like but around half what we inherited, and the progress we’ve made on inflation has given the bank the confidence to cut rates 3 times this year.

And annual real wages have grown 7 consecutive quarters, now at their strongest rate in 5 years.


One of the most pleasing aspects of all this is that the private sector has now regained its rightful role as the main driver of growth in our economy.

This is the private sector recovery we planned for, prepared for, and hoped for – and now we need to sustain the momentum.

We are ahead of schedule.

In fact, if Treasury was publishing its mid‑year forecasts today it would be downgrading the outlook for public demand and upgrading private demand.

Progress is not limited to one part of the private side of the economy either.

We see it in household consumption because of the growth in real incomes.

We see it across housing and construction because of progress on the costs of building materials and cuts to interest rates.

And we see it in business investment.

Public demand put a floor under growth in 2024 and there are good reasons to be grateful for that.

Out of 38 OECD economies, Australia is one of only half a dozen not to have experienced any negative quarters of growth in the last 3 years.

But for 9 months in a row now, private activity has driven our economic growth.

Public demand has made no contribution to growth at all in the last 2 quarters.

This is a clear sign that consumption and capital are returning to the private economy in welcome ways.

We shouldn’t get ahead of ourselves because we know these quarterly numbers bounce around.

But the trends are now clear and encouraging.

For the first time since mid‑2023, discretionary household spending is doing more for annual consumption growth than essentials.

This is thanks to real wages growth, getting inflation down, our tax cuts and rate cuts.

It’s the same story in housing.

When we came to office, dwelling investment was falling at an annual rate of more than 5 per cent.

Today, it’s growing at 4.8 per cent.

That turnaround is across the board – 3 stubborn barriers to construction are all easing.

New builds are picking up.

Renovation activity is growing by around 5 per cent through the year.

And in the labour market, construction job vacancies have halved from their peak, so worker shortages are a little less acute.

Cost growth is coming down too.

Annual new dwelling construction cost growth has slowed from almost 20 per cent when we were elected to now 1 per cent.

And the rate cuts already in the system are helping with financing costs.

There’s still much further to go to fire up business investment but welcome trends have emerged in the most recent data.

Business investment has grown at 3.9 per cent a year on average since we came to office, compared to falling 1.3 per cent on average under our predecessors.

Investment as a share of the economy has lifted from 11.1 per cent to 12.3 per cent, but we need it to rise further and faster.

In the data, we also see an important shift in the nature of business investment.

Non‑mining investment, particularly in renewable energy and technology, is now doing more of the heavy lifting.

In fact, it’s grown over twice as fast as mining investment since the 2022 election, averaging 9.4 per cent of GDP over the past 3 years.

That is the highest three‑year average share of GDP since 2012.

Spending on intellectual property like software, data, and AI is now almost as large as spending on mining.

Capital expenditure in energy construction is up nearly 40 per cent since we came to office, driven by the roll‑out of large‑scale renewable energy projects and supported by our Future Made in Australia agenda.

More new businesses are being created each month on average than under any previous government, and the insolvency rate is now around half of what we saw during the Howard years.

This is a solid foundation from which to meet all this global uncertainty.

We know there is more to do to keep business investment going – it’s getting better but still not strong enough.

We know there’s much more to do to build more homes, and to boost living standards for workers.

And we know the best way to sustain that progress –

The most effective way to turn this cyclical recovery into something more structural –

Is by lifting productivity.

And that means attracting more investment.


These were the most important objectives at our Economic Reform Roundtable in August.

I want to thank Andrew again for the key role he played there.

I’m working very hard to do justice to the genuine spirit of collaboration and cooperation we saw there.

There’s been a flurry of reform activity in the 2 months since I brought everyone together in the cabinet room.

A massive amount of work is underway, some of it public, and much of it quietly behind the scenes.

Let me give you a stocktake of what’s been done, what’s underway, and 2 new elements I’m announcing tonight.

Already we’ve:

Announced we’ll slash another 500 nuisance tariffs, taking the total to 1,000. This streamlines $23 billion worth of trade and will save businesses $157 million every year.

We’ve introduced Katy Gallagher’s regulatory reform bill in the parliament, which will improve the operations of 13 government agencies, help cut compliance costs and unwind red tape.

The Investor Front Door pilot is now up and running, to steer major projects through approvals and attract the investment that will power our next wave of growth.

Murray will be introducing important changes to the EPBC Act to parliament tomorrow, sooner than we had originally promised.

Our major regulators have provided 400 ideas to wind back regulation where it’s unnecessary or duplicative.

We’ve asked the Council of Financial Regulators to help shape them into a package of reforms to make financial regulation more efficient, and more supportive of investment.

We’re progressing a Single National Market with state and territory treasurers, including work on road user charging and a more ambitious approach to National Competition Policy.

Clare O’Neil is pausing and streamlining the construction code, and working with Murray to clear a backlog of 26,000 homes that are waiting for environmental assessment.

Already more than 8,000 homes have been approved since August.

Tim Ayres and Andrew Charlton are finalising the AI plan and Katy is working on a public sector AI strategy, to be released by the end of the year as well.

Jason Clare and Andrew Giles are leading work on tertiary harmonisation, to make it easier for students to move between VET and university.

And as part of our usual budget processes, we will continue to engage on ideas for tax reform and budget sustainability.

Tonight, I can also announce another 2 important steps we’re taking from the Roundtable.

Firstly, Treasury is starting a new round of consultation on the superannuation performance test.

We’ve made it clear we’re open to considering responsible changes that maintain very high standards and the super funds’ responsibilities to members.

Which is why we’ll ask industry and experts for their ideas.

Treasury will stand up an industry working group to help find consensus.

The goal is to refine and strengthen the performance test to make sure it isn’t creating unnecessary obstacles to investment, particularly in key areas like housing and energy.

It’s about better aligning and unlocking investment that also boosts productivity, while maintaining a robust test and a primary focus on member returns.

I always wanted to tell you about new and substantial progress on our $900 million National Productivity Fund.

We have just signed off on the first set of state and territory reforms that will be paid out as part of that fund, with more to come.

This money only gets paid out when states deliver.

The Northern Territory government will now stop unnecessary objections to commercial developments – which could pave the way for more competition in its supermarket sector.

The ACT will now identify regulatory barriers to using pre‑fabricated materials, to help fast track housing construction.

And South Australia has now nominated a suite of zoning reforms which will help businesses redevelop land without needing to get a new permit, and speed up the delivery of mixed‑use zones, including 3,600 new homes.

This is not even an exhaustive list, but it gives you a really good sense of the reform we are leveraging and incentivising.

It also makes clear that we don’t see productivity as the responsibility of one level of government, or indeed one minister or one department.

Since the day after the election, we have deliberately made productivity a central objective of our second term agenda.

In every portfolio, our economic reforms are all about helping workers and businesses earn more, keep more, invest more, employ more and build more – to lift living standards overall.

There’s been so much progress already on the directions set by the Roundtable and we’ll bring even more of it together in our fifth Budget in May.

Here I want to be clear that this year’s MYEFO will not be a mini‑budget with lots of new initiatives.

The mid‑year update will be precisely that – an opportunity to update forecasts and the fiscal position.

The main game will be May.


I’ve focused on the private sector recovery tonight because this provides the foundation and momentum we need –

And because we know we won’t turn this recent progress into a permanent lift in living standards without more productivity and more investment.

I’ll have more to say about our investment agenda on Friday in Sydney.

And I’ve emphasised progress since the Roundtable, partly to correct a misperception fed by our opponents and critics –

But mostly because the Roundtable and the work we’ve done since then demonstrates the effort we are putting in to including you at every stage.

Because even with these welcome signs of momentum in the private economy, even with all our advantages, and even with all the progress we’ve made out of the Roundtable –

We know there’s much more work to do.

And we know that work’s best done in the considered, consultative, collaborative and methodical way that defines our government, from the Prime Minister down.

I’ve made and we’ve made a deliberate effort to put Australian businesses at the very centre of our policy development.

Not just because we know our future growth depends on your strength, resilience and ingenuity.

But because we know your involvement at every stage –

Your insights and ideas –

Give us the best chance of seizing the opportunities in front of us at a really important time for our economy, in the world.

That’s why this opportunity tonight is so welcome – thank you.

ACT Government supports victim-survivors of organisational child sexual abuse

Source: Australian Capital Territory – State Government




ACT Government supports victim-survivors of organisational child sexual abuse – Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate

















As part of ACT Government’s ‘One Government, One Voice’ program, we are transitioning this website across to our . You can access everything you need through this website while it’s happening.


Released 29/10/2025

The ACT Government is committed to supporting victim-survivors of organisational child sexual abuse to access appropriate legal remedies and pathways and improve their experience of engaging with the justice system.

The ACT Government will be supporting the Civil Law (Wrongs) (Organisational Child Abuse Liability) Amendment Bill 2025, introduced by Mr Rattenbury MLA, with government amendments.

Attorney-General Tara Cheyne will bring government amendments that would amend the meaning of ‘employee’ under section 114BC of the Bill to omit individuals ‘associated with an organisation’. These amendments are intended to contain reform to the primary issue identified in the High Court’s 2024 decision in Bird v DP, reduce the risk of the ACT not aligning with other states and territories who have legislated on this matter, and reduce the potential risk posed to a broad range of non-government organisations who rely on volunteers.

The proposed government amendments would retain the broadening of the definition of employee to individuals ‘akin to an employee‘, and the Bill’s regulation making power to prescribe circumstances where an individual is or is not akin to an employee. This regulation making power provides the means to provide further clarity, if required, on the definitional scope of an employee, and to respond to legislative and common law developments in Australia.

In proposing this amendment, the Government considered the findings of the Standing Committee on Legal Affairs’ Inquiry into the Bill, direct advocacy from stakeholders, including religious organisations, and inter-jurisdictional models on statutory organisational vicarious liability. The Government remains closely engaged with Commonwealth, State and Territory counterparts through the Standing Council of Attorneys-General on the impacts of the High Court’s decision and in considering potential reform options in a nationally consistent way.

The ACT Government has a strong track record for legislative reform aimed at better supporting victim-survivors and strengthening safeguards to protect children and prevent organisational child sexual abuse.

Attorney-General Tara Cheyne affirms that “supporting this Bill is one of the many steps the Government is taking, and will continue to take, to build a safer and more accountable system, one that removes avenues for perpetrators to exploit organisational settings to facilitate offending”.

“I acknowledge the work of the ACT Greens, and particularly Mr Rattenbury, in bringing forward this important Private Members Bill, their advocacy for victim-survivors, and for working constructively with the government on an issue that our parties both feel strongly about,” Attorney-General Cheyne said.

– Statement ends –

Tara Cheyne, MLA | Media Releases

«ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

New laws passed to better protect bus drivers and passengers

Source: Australian Capital Territory – State Government




New laws passed to better protect bus drivers and passengers – Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate

















As part of ACT Government’s ‘One Government, One Voice’ program, we are transitioning this website across to our . You can access everything you need through this website while it’s happening.


Released 29/10/2025

New laws to manage anti-social behaviour and promote safe journeys on public transport have passed the Legislative Assembly today.

The Road Transport (Public Passenger Servies) Amendment Bill 2025 delivers on a significant Labor election commitment.

Transport Canberra Officers and ACT Police now have new powers to direct individuals to leave the immediate area within a bus interchange, or the immediate area around a bus stop, if they are displaying aggressive or menacing behaviour and pose a safety risk to others.

Minister for Transport Chris Steel said this is a significant milestone in improving the safety of Transport Canberra bus drivers, passengers and members of the community.

“The ACT Government has listened to Canberrans and our workforce to improve safety on our public transport network,” said Minister Steel.

“Everyone has the right to be safe at work, and our passengers have the right to be safe when accessing this critical service.

“This is a powerful line in the sand that makes it absolutely clear that anti-social and violent behaviour is not acceptable.”

These new powers will apply to police officers, Transport Canberra Field Transport Officers, and the new teams of Transport Enforcement Officers funded in the 2025-26 Budget.

“Once appropriately trained, authorised persons will be able to act as a measure between bus drivers and the police, helping to deter violent behaviour and de-escalate situations before they become serious,” said Minister Steel.

“The new laws also allow the police to remove a person if that person is failing to comply with the move on direction.”

Transport Canberra are currently finalising recruitment for the new Transit Enforcement Officers after applications closed earlier this month.

The new officers will be trained to use the new powers to deter and respond to anti-social behaviour and occupational violence before being deployed across the bus network, while also conducting fare compliance.

Specialised de-escalation training will also continue to be rolled out successfully to the Transport Canberra bus operations workforce.

– Statement ends –

Chris Steel, MLA | Media Releases

«ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

Address to the Foreign Correspondents’ Association Australia & South Pacific 40th anniversary celebrations

Source: Australia Government Statements 2

I acknowledge the Ngunnawal and Ngambri people as traditional custodians of the lands of the ACT and region.

Thank you for having me here tonight as part of the celebrations for the 40th anniversary of the Foreign Correspondents’ Association.

1985, when the Association began, capped off an intensely notable period for traditional media.

Only a decade or so earlier, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward broke the biggest story of twentieth century American politics in the Watergate affair.

Following on from other earlier, transformative, moments in print journalism like Oriana Fallaci, whose work from Mexico, Greece and Vietnam earned her reputation as the most feared interviewer in the world.

Or the work of Sunday Times journalists in 1972, campaigning for compensation for those affected by Thalidomide in the United Kingdom.

Here of course, we remember Catherine Martin, in the West Australian, winning the first ever Gold Walkley in 1978 for her front-page report on the high rates of illnesses and death among workers at the Australian Blue Asbestos mine in Wittenoom Gorge.

Phil Dickie’s articles for the Courier Mail in 1987, which exposed rampant police and government corruption, leading to the Fitzgerald Inquiry, and the eventual resignation of Sir Joh.

Alan Tate, and Paul Bailey writing in the Sydney Morning Herald in 1989 and exposing the high levels of the toxic chemical benzene hexachloride in Sydney’s fish, linked to the then long-practice of using the ocean to “purify” the city’s sewerage.

Television, and radio, also reigned.

In the United States, we had a movie star president in Reagan – who understood the power of the televisual medium for influence, and reach.

Our leaders also took to the small screen, with the first ever televised debate between Prime Minister Bob Hawke and Opposition Leader Andrew Peacock in 1984 globally, more than 1.9 billion people tuned in to watch the live broadcast of Live Aid – close to 40 per cent of the world’s population at the time.

And sitting down for the evening news was an event for the whole family, watching anchors who were more than newsreaders, but voices of authority, and people you could trust.

When I think of the media in 1985 in Australia, I think of Jana Wendt, George Negus, Ray Martin.

What change has happened in the sector since 1985, change which you have seen, which you have experienced, lived through, managed and survived.

The rise of the internet, and the ability to carry all the knowledge of the world in one’s pocket, or bag, has disrupted, and challenged, the primacy of traditional media.

People no longer needed to purchase an entire paper to read what interests them. And they don’t need to watch television at all, if they even own a TV nowadays, let alone a radio.

Local newspapers – once found in every town or city – are struggling to survive.

Those that do are leaner, thinner, staffed by fewer and fewer local reporters, publishing fewer local stories.

People increasingly consume their news on social media, a frontier without editorial supervision or oversight where misinformation and disinformation can spread, at scale and at speed.

And for all that we live in an age where we can access nearly all the information the world possesses through our phone, social media algorithms feed us the content we want to see, and keep us scrolling, pushing us towards more extreme content, content that is more likely to parrot false claims or divisive narratives.

The spectre of Artificial Intelligence also looms.

It may increase productivity, but at the cost of accuracy, quality, and trust.

AI extracts news content to train their models without compensation for the original publisher.

And we know it is being weaponised by authoritarian actors to push propaganda or to undermine social cohesion and blur the line between fact and fiction.

In our region too, are similar, and different challenges.

A limited pool of media professionals, and difficulty attracting, training, and retaining talent, especially on a limited operating budget.

More difficult operating conditions as the rate of connectivity and internet access varies across countries and regions.

A collapse of traditional business models and lack of revenue, making it difficult to sustain and grow operations, or build and maintain online presence.

And while the sector is passionate about maintaining its independence and credibility, speaking truth to power in a small population requires extraordinary resilience.

At a time when our media sectors contend with this great disruption, and uncertainty is also the time when we need accurate and reliable reporting, more than ever.

To fight disinformation, and protect our democracies.

Public interest journalism is a vital service in a healthy democracy. It is a public good.

We are doing what we can to support a vibrant and independent media sector, here, and in our region.

Our Indo-Pacific Broadcasting Strategy invests more than $68 million over five years to create and distribute compelling Australian content that engages with audiences in the region, enhance access to trusted content, and strengthen regional media capacity and capability – including by boosting connections between Australian-based and Indo-Pacific media.

This includes the Government’s investment of $40.5 million in the ABC to support new content creation, expand its FM radio transmission, improve digital engagement, and increase ongoing support for our regional media partners and $28.4 million for the PacificAus TV initiative to bolster the viability of Pacific media and expand access to Australian television programs.

These investments build on Australia’s longstanding support for regional media, such as the Pacific Media Assistance Scheme and PNG-focused Media Development Initiative programs that have supported media resilience, independence, and professionalism for more than a decade.

And we continue to bolster our support through our newly established Regional Media Support Fund, a flexible and responsible mechanism to support media in the Pacific, Southeast Asia and South Asia, and ensure they have the skills and tools they need to serve the public interest.

We continue to organise a wide range of International Media Visits every year, welcoming journalists from around the world to Australia.

Visits which deepen understanding of our people, and values, and affirm our unwavering commitment to press freedom and the strength of our independent media sector.

We are also investing domestically in a package of mechanisms to preserve local news and support resilience and innovation for our news organisations.

Including putting in place the mechanisms to ensure journalists are supported in their work – and to do our best to have people informed on social media platforms with real, not fake, news.

Australia is leading the world to put in place measures to ensure the sustainability of news media.

Because now, more than ever we need it here and in our region – viable, resilient, professional, independent media, providing our communities the news that matters, and helping our democracies thrive.

Congratulations to the Foreign Correspondents’ Association on the tremendous milestone of forty years and I thank you, for your support for this project we have ahead of us.

Thank you.

Historic Cape York land handback

Source: Government of Queensland

Issued: 29 Oct 2025

Open larger image

Captain Billy Landing will become part of a new national park

The Wuthathi People are celebrating the historic handover of almost 15-thousand hectares of land that has led to the creation of a new national park in Cape York.

The Wuthathi (Captain Billy Landing) National Park (Cape York Peninsula Aboriginal Land) (CYPAL) was created following the handback of land deeds on 14 October 2025.

These lands are part of an extensive living cultural landscape that is rich in traditional, spiritual and cultural significance for Wuthathi people, and the handback acknowledges their rights and their deep and unbroken connection to Country (Ngaachi) and Karakara (sea Country).

The handback includes around 4,300 hectares of Aboriginal freehold land and around 10,560 hectares of the newly dedicated national park (CYPAL).

The new national park features beach access and camping areas at Captain Billy Landing, rainforest, cloud forest, woodlands, heathland and natural springs.

Through the department’s Cape York Peninsula Tenure Resolution Program, Wuthathi Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC now have ownership of almost 133,000 hectares, held in trust for the Wuthathi people.

This includes around 48,000 hectares of national park (CYPAL) and almost 85,000 hectares of Aboriginal freehold land that features diverse landscapes and critical habitat for threatened species.

The Aboriginal freehold land provides Traditional Owners with opportunities for housing, business development, tourism and other economic outcomes.

Director Rachel Small said the Queensland Government has returned more than 4.23 million hectares of land to Cape York Traditional Owners since 2007.

“The Queensland Government is committed to growing our protected area and this handback will take us another step toward meeting our ambitious target of 1.8 million hectares during this term of government,” Ms Small said.

“The handback recognises the Wuthathi people commitment to jointly manage the Wuthathi (Captain Billy Landing) National Park (Cape York Peninsula Aboriginal Land) with my department.

“This historic transfer expands Wuthathi’s opportunity to capitalise on the unique visitor experience offered by the Captain Billy Landing locality, which has been visited by thousands of people on their travels through Cape York Peninsula.”

Chairperson of Wuthathi Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC Keron Murray said the handback is another milestone in our people’s journey.

“This is a celebration and will help us achieve our goals and become the authors of our destiny like our Elders before us.” Mr Murray said.

Wuthathi Tribal Elders Council Chairperson Johnson Chippendale spoke on behalf of the Wuthathi people.

“I feel a mix of happiness and sorrow, and we are overjoyed to see Mutjati (Captain Billy) land transfer come to fruition in our lifetime.

“But our hearts are also heavy with the absence of the many Elders who paved the way for this day but are no longer with us to celebrate, but I know they are watching over us in spirit.” Mr Chippendale said.

Man arrested after Calwell standoff

Source: ACT Police

Last update: Wednesday, 29 October 2025 9:59am

Original publication: Wednesday, 29 October 2025 9:59am

A 45-year-old Calwell man will face the ACT Magistrates Court this morning after police will allege he barricaded himself and another woman in his home for more than six hours yesterday afternoon.

At about 12.20pm yesterday afternoon, police attended a Calwell home to perform a welfare check on the man.

Upon arriving at the home, police observed several physical barricades in and around the house, including steel bars, glass fragments and steel barricades.

While attempting to speak to the owner of the house, police will allege they heard two loud bangs and smelt burnt explosive powder.

Police then called in the AFP’s Tactical Response Unit and negotiators to help safely retrieve the man and a woman who police identified also being at the residence.

Police will allege later in that afternoon while approaching the front window of the house, the man threw a whipper snipper at police and presented a sword 1-metre in length.

Negotiations continued where police allege the man refused to release the woman from the house.

At about 6.30pm police forced entry into the house when the man attempted to set fire to part of the house using a flamethrower and a butane can.

Police were then able to restrain the man before he was taken to hospital by ACT Ambulance Service paramedics. He was released back into police custody later that evening. The woman was physically unharmed.

He was charged with one count of forcible confinement, one count of cause explosion/danger to hinder or detention and two counts of possessing an offensive weapon with intent and will front court this morning.

Man to face court following assaults

Source: ACT Police

Last update: Wednesday, 29 October 2025 8:40am

Original publication: Wednesday, 29 October 2025 8:40am

A 41-year-old Bonner man will face the ACT Magistrates Court today after he was charged with assault and weapon offences.

About 11:30am yesterday (Tuesday, 28 October 2025) police allege the man attended a carpark at a Gungahlin school and assaulted a family member.

He then proceeded to allegedly assault her friend, before threatening her group of friends with an axe.

The incident was reported to police and about 2pm yesterday the man was arrested.

He has been charged with common assault, aggravated common assault (family violence) and possess offensive weapon with intent.

ACT Policing stands ready to assist victims experiencing family violence.

If you are in this situation – when it is safe to do so – please contact police on 131 444 or Triple Zero (000) in an emergency or contact a support service who can assist with crisis support, safety planning and advice.

If you require assistance, you can contact:

  • Triple Zero (000) in an emergency or life-threatening situation.
  • Police Assistance on 131 444 if it is a non-emergency, but you require police assistance.
  • The Domestic Violence Crisis Service provides a 24-hour crisis line, advice, safety planning and information every day of the year and can be reached on 02 6280 0900.
  • The Canberra Rape Crisis Centre provides a 24-hour crisis line and can be contacted on 02 6247 2525.

Man charged with upskirting also found with stolen items

Source: ACT Police

Last update: Tuesday, 28 October 2025 5:04pm

Original publication: Tuesday, 28 October 2025 4:39pm

A 24-year-old man from Ngunnawal has been charged with attempting to take intimate images without consent, failing to stop for police and possessing stolen property after police executed a search warrant earlier at his residence today.

About 2:30pm on Friday, 3 October (2025), police conducting routine patrols in Gungahlin sighted a man riding an electric scooter without a helmet, while subsequently carrying a second electric scooter.

The man failed to stop when directed to do so and whilst attempting to avoid police he dropped the scooter he was carrying.

A search of Gungahlin and the surrounding suburbs failed to locate the man, but police found the scooter he was riding in Throsby. Subsequent enquiries identified this scooter had been reported stolen from a home in Gungahlin.

In a separate incident, police obtained CCTV footage from Thursday, 21 October (2025), of the man following two school students into a Gungahlin shopping centre and appearing to take images up their skirts without consent.

About 7:30am this morning (Tuesday, 28 October 2025), police conducted a search warrant at the man’s residence in Ngunnawal where the phone allegedly used to take the intimate images, and an alleged stolen safe with its door broken off, were recovered by police.

Police also recovered distinctive jewellery from the man’s home and ACT Policing is seeking to reunite the item with its owner. If you believe it is yours and you can provide proof of ownership or you can provide any information in relation to the safe, please contact Crime Stoppers via the Crime Stoppers website, quoting reference 8195316.

The man was subsequently arrested by police and has been charged with failing to stop a motor vehicle for police, attempt intimate observations/visual data and two counts of unlawful possession of stolen property. He is expected to face court today.

Alcohol and drug affected motorcycle rider charged after collision

Source: ACT Police

Last update: Tuesday, 28 October 2025 1:47pm

Original publication: Tuesday, 28 October 2025 11:04am

A 33-year-old Chisholm man will be charged after crashing his motorcycle while allegedly under the influence of drugs and alcohol in Calwell last month.

About 10pm on 21 September, 2025, police were called to the intersection of Webber Crescent and Were Street in Calwell and located a damaged motorcycle resting on the side of the road.

Ten minutes later, police located the rider, who had fled the scene following the collision, with visible injuries and signs of intoxication. He was transported by ambulance to hospital for treatment under police escort.

At the hospital, police searched the man, and located a knife which was subsequently seized by police.

A blood test was also conducted on the man which confirmed the presence of alcohol and methylamphetamine at the time of the collision.

The man, who was subject to parole conditions at the time of the incident, has been charged with driving under the influence of alcohol and drugs, possess prohibited weapon, and breach of parole. He is expected to face court later today.

Three people charged with family violence offences

Source: ACT Police

Last update: Monday, 27 October 2025 3:31pm

Original publication: Monday, 27 October 2025 10:32am

Three people have been charged with family violence offences following incidents during the weekend.

A 23-year-old Belconnen man was charged following alleged family violence offences on Saturday (25 October 2025). The man is alleged to have struck his partner with a weapon causing serious injuries.

He will face the ACT Magistrates Court today (27 October 2025) charged with acts endangering life – offensive weapon and aggravated recklessly inflict grievous bodily harm (FV).

Yesterday (Sunday, 26 October 2025) a 31-year-old Chisholm woman was arrested after allegedly hitting her partner in the face several times and choking him.

She will face the ACT Magistrates Court today charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm and chokes, suffocates, strangles another person (FV).

A third person, a 30-year-old Kaleen man, has been charged with stalking and aggravated stalking after he allegedly attended his ex-partners house without invitation multiple times and contacted her numerous times leaving voicemails, sending text messages and videos.

He will attend the ACT Magistrates Court Today.

ACT Policing stands ready to assist victims experiencing family violence.

If you are in this situation – when it is safe to do so – please contact police on 131 444 or Triple Zero (000) in an emergency or contact a support service who can assist with crisis support, safety planning and advice.

If you require assistance, you can contact:

  • Triple Zero (000) in an emergency or life-threatening situation.
  • Police Assistance on 131 444 if it is a non-emergency, but you require police assistance.
  • The Domestic Violence Crisis Service provides a 24-hour crisis line, advice, safety planning and information every day of the year and can be reached on 02 6280 0900.
  • The Canberra Rape Crisis Centre provides a 24-hour crisis line and can be contacted on 02 6247 2525