Charges – Stolen motor vehicle and pursuit – Palmerston

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force has arrested a 31-year-old male in relation to a stolen motor vehicle and pursuit that occurred in Palmerston on Thursday morning.

Around 11:30am, police received reports that a male had allegedly threatened a person known to him with an edged weapon before stealing the victim’s Toyota RAV4 and fleeing the scene.

Members from the Dog Operations Unit and Darwin Traffic Operations responded and located the vehicle travelling along Roystonea Avenue, where a pursuit was initiated through Gunn.

The pursuit was subsequently terminated for safety reasons as the offending vehicle was travelling 120km in an 80km zone along Roystonea Avenue towards Temple Terrace.

A short time later, the vehicle was located abandoned on Hannibal Circuit, Gray. The alleged offender fled into a nearby residence, where police attended and apprehended him without further incident.

He has since been charged with Aggravated robbery, Theft, Drive, use, ride motor vehicle without consent and was remanded to appear in Darwin Local Court today.

Police urge anyone with information about the incident to make contact on 131 444. Please quote reference number P26029524. 

Vehicle seized after alleged hooning incident in Blackmans Bay

Source: Tasmania Police

Vehicle seized after alleged hooning incident in Blackmans Bay

Friday, 30 January 2026 – 3:12 pm.

Kingston Police have seized a white Ford Falcon station wagon following reports of a vehicle hooning in Blackmans Bay last night.
The car was allegedly used in a hooning incident in Woodlands Drive at 11.30pm on Thursday, 29 January 2026.
The vehicle has been seized for a period of 28 days.
Police continue to target hooning drivers and warn offenders that when you are caught, you will be fined and separated from your car for a significant period of time. The minimum fine for an offence of aggravated evade police is in excess of $3000.
Police would like to speak with anyone who may have witnessed the driving behaviour or has dash-cam footage. Information can be provided by calling Kingston Police on 131 444, or report anonymously via Crime Stoppers Tasmania on 1800 333 000 or at crimestopperstas.com.au. Please quote ESCAD: 053-30012026.
Thank you to the community for their assistance and information so far.

Major fires continue across Victoria

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

Three weeks after the Catastrophic Fire Danger Day of 9 January, there are still seven major fires across the state, three of which are still going and may burn for days or weeks.

More than 435,000 hectares of land have been burned in what has been the longest duration heatwave event Victoria has experienced since 2009. 

On 9 January CFA attended almost 200 grass and scrub fires, including in support of Fire Rescue Victoria, with more than 80 strike teams dispatched to support these incidents. 

Between 7 January and 27 January: 

  • CFA responded to more than 3,300 individual incidents 
  • There were more than 7,000 individual vehicle responses to these incidents, utilising over 1,800 appliances from more than 780 brigades 
  • CFA’s response was supported by over 400 strike teams, requiring more than 2,000 appliance deployments, made up of over 1,000 appliances from 650 brigades 
  • Across these incidents, there has already been in excess of 23,000 member turnouts recorded in completed fire reports (note: these are total – and many members will have turned out numerous times)   

Last night, CFA hosted a special Volunteer Forum at Harcourt Station focusing on the January fires. You can view the recording here. 

The forum heard from members of the Harcourt brigade including Captain Andrew Wilson and former captain Tyrone Rice, who lost his own home while he, his wife and son were defending their town. 

Other guests included Ivan Gilbert from Harcourt Progress Association, local resident Michael Pilcher, one of the 2,200+ Victorians who have expressed interest in joining CFA since 1 January, as well as District Mechanical Officers Michael Zimmer and Henry Vale who helped keep CFA’s vehicles running during the extreme conditions, and ICT Program Director Shane Peacock who spoke about initiatives which are improving communications on the fireground.  

Chief Officer Jason Heffernan and CEO Greg Leach AFSM also discussed some of the topical issues which have been raised in the media over recent weeks relating to CFA’s funding, the age of vehicles and volunteer numbers.   

“We are experiencing one of the most intense fire seasons we have seen in years and there are still many more weeks ahead of us yet,” Chief Officer Jason Heffernan said. 

“We are proud of the incredible efforts of our volunteers and staff who have worked tirelessly throughout these past weeks to keep Victorians safe. 

“The commitment of these people who have given up their time away from family, friends and workplaces to serve and protect others in their community or another community – often for days at a time – cannot be underestimated. 

“We also acknowledge and thank Victorians for their gratitude to our members and our organisation expressed through our various channels, including on social media, and also the many ways in which they have generously supported our brigades directly in their local communities.” 

A message of appreciation to all volunteers from the CFA Chair Jo Plummer, on behalf of the Board, closed out the Forum. 

CFA is prioritising the safety and wellbeing of our members and encourages anyone who needs support to contact our free, 24/7 services on 1800 959 232. The Victorian Government’s Bushfire Recovery Hotline is available on 1800 560 760. 

Submitted by News and Media

Major fires still burning after Catastrophic Fire Danger day

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

Three weeks after the Catastrophic Fire Danger Day of 9 January, there are still seven major fires across the state, three of which are still going and may burn for days or weeks.

More than 435,000 hectares of land have been burned in what has been the longest duration heatwave event Victoria has experienced since 2009. 

On 9 January CFA attended almost 200 grass and scrub fires, including in support of Fire Rescue Victoria, with more than 80 strike teams dispatched to support these incidents. 

Between 7 January and 27 January: 

  • CFA responded to more than 3,300 individual incidents 
  • There were more than 7,000 individual vehicle responses to these incidents, utilising over 1,800 appliances from more than 780 brigades 
  • CFA’s response was supported by over 400 strike teams, requiring more than 2,000 appliance deployments, made up of over 1,000 appliances from 650 brigades 
  • Across these incidents, there has already been in excess of 23,000 member turnouts recorded in completed fire reports (note: these are total – and many members will have turned out numerous times)   

Last night, CFA hosted a special Volunteer Forum at Harcourt Station focusing on the January fires. You can view the recording here. 

The forum heard from members of the Harcourt brigade including Captain Andrew Wilson and former captain Tyrone Rice, who lost his own home while he, his wife and son were defending their town. 

Other guests included Ivan Gilbert from Harcourt Progress Association, local resident Michael Pilcher, one of the 2,200+ Victorians who have expressed interest in joining CFA since 1 January, as well as District Mechanical Officers Michael Zimmer and Henry Vale who helped keep CFA’s vehicles running during the extreme conditions, and ICT Program Director Shane Peacock who spoke about initiatives which are improving communications on the fireground.  

Chief Officer Jason Heffernan and CEO Greg Leach AFSM also discussed some of the topical issues which have been raised in the media over recent weeks relating to CFA’s funding, the age of vehicles and volunteer numbers.   

“We are experiencing one of the most intense fire seasons we have seen in years and there are still many more weeks ahead of us yet,” Chief Officer Jason Heffernan said. 

“We are proud of the incredible efforts of our volunteers and staff who have worked tirelessly throughout these past weeks to keep Victorians safe. 

“The commitment of these people who have given up their time away from family, friends and workplaces to serve and protect others in their community or another community – often for days at a time – cannot be underestimated. 

“We also acknowledge and thank Victorians for their gratitude to our members and our organisation expressed through our various channels, including on social media, and also the many ways in which they have generously supported our brigades directly in their local communities.” 

A message of appreciation to all volunteers from the CFA Chair Jo Plummer, on behalf of the Board, closed out the Forum. 

CFA is prioritising the safety and wellbeing of our members and encourages anyone who needs support to contact our free, 24/7 services on 1800 959 232. The Victorian Government’s Bushfire Recovery Hotline is available on 1800 560 760. 

Submitted by News and Media

Address at the 100th Anniversary of Citi in Australia, Sydney Opera House, Sydney

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

A very big thanks to Mark for the introduction and the opportunity to say a few words tonight.

To Jane for making the trip to Sydney for the celebrations and for making the time to meet with me this afternoon.

To all the familiar faces gathered here at the Opera House, on Gadigal land.

And everyone from Citi in particular: happy birthday.

One hundred years is an extraordinary milestone by any measure.

But what you may not know is tonight could easily have been your 110th anniversary.

The history of that lost decade sits in our National Archives.

In 1916, the Commonwealth Bank Governor Sir Denison Miller wrote to the Treasury Secretary about a request from the National City Bank of New York to open in Australia.

Sir Denison opposed the request, partly on grounds of international reciprocity.

‘I do not think there is anything to stop them opening a branch if they care to,’ he wrote in his advice.

‘Although the Commonwealth Bank of Australia could not open a branch in New York if it desired to.’

Sir Denison’s letter was signed ‘your obedient servant’ – not how subsequent CEOs of the CBA have described themselves, at least not to me.

But Treasurer William Higgs agreed with the advice, and the request was declined.

History shows the rebuff didn’t stop Citi.

Ten years later the bank opened in Australia.

Since then, Citi’s Australian century tracks the evolution of our 3 economies following Federation.

In the early 1900s, still agricultural and colonial.

Forty years later, a new industrial economy, but highly protected for international banks, following the 1937 Royal Commission and wartime controls of the 1940s.

Then a third economy in the 1980s when Paul and Bob opened us up to the world.

By then Citi was already well known to government, after its big role in the mid‑70s buying Industrial Acceptance Corporation.

When Citi received its Australian banking licence in 1985, it was the only foreign bank to get one without a domestic partner here.

This was a unique marker of trust – but also a sign of where Australia’s more open economy was heading.

Forty years on, Citi is playing a defining role helping to build a fourth Australian economy, powered by cleaner energy and transformed by technology, and helping to ensure Australia is an island of stability and opportunity in a sea of volatility and risk.

That’s why I’m really grateful to the entire crew at Citi – and personally grateful to Mark, who I’ve come to know pretty well.

We thank you for conferring with us and working with us.

One part of our partnership is the A50 forum here in Sydney.

The A50 has become an annual highlight, bolstered last year with the NSW government coming on board, and I acknowledge Daniel Mookhey, who’s here tonight.

There’s a deeper reason why partnerships like A50 are more important than ever in this new world of uncertainty.

A reason that Sir Denison didn’t predict in the letter he wrote 110 years ago.

One of his other arguments for recommending against Citi’s entrance was that it would not help the business of the Commonwealth ‘in any way’, to use his words.

Maybe that view made sense at the time.

But it also illustrates the most consequential change in international finance over the past hundred years.

For much of the 20th century, governments spent a lot of their time filing the sharp edges off markets.

Few would have imagined a hundred years ago the role markets would play in filing the sharp edges off governments.

Finance was seen as a source of volatility and risk that needed to be managed and restrained – and for good reason.

In Australia, we did this by building a robust regulatory system, establishing the rules of the game for capital requirements and risk tolerance.

Fast forward a century and we are living in a near‑permanent state of global economic upheaval.

Four shocks in just 20 years have come from trade tensions, a pandemic, busted supply chains, and financial crises, at the same time as structural changes in AI, energy, demography and geopolitics reshape the bigger backdrop.

In this environment, no government can insure itself against every upheaval.

Public balance sheets alone cannot and should not absorb every risk.

Capital flows and markets can do for governments what governments once did for markets.

Imposing discipline and absorbing shocks.

In an unpredictable world, well‑functioning and well‑regulated capital markets can be a source of stability, not just speculation.

Capital can smooth volatility rather than amplify it, and direct investment toward the technologies, industries and regions that offer the greatest economic potential over time.

We saw this clearly in Australia last year.

The private sector recovery was the primary story in our economy in 2025.

As public demand eased, private demand took its place and more.

Private demand has contributed more to growth than public demand for the last 4 quarters.

In the year to September, annual private demand growth lifted more than five‑fold and was responsible for all our economic growth.

At the same time, annual public demand growth was less than a third of what it was in the prior year.

This private sector‑led recovery was also broader than many economists expected.

It was across consumption, dwelling and business investment, especially in areas like renewable energy and digital infrastructure.

These investments are driving growth now and expanding our capacity for growth in the future.

And in the decade ahead, the way capital is allocated will play a decisive role in determining which countries seize the opportunities of AI, clean energy and the digital economy, and which fall behind.

Your capital will make the most of our advantages in wind and solar, digital innovation and data centres, and critical minerals.

Pricing risk, directing decisions, and allocating resources at a scale no government can match.

We know and embrace our responsibilities as governments to help create the conditions for you to succeed.

That’s why our agenda spans competition policy, better regulation and faster approvals, the net zero transformation, trade and international partnerships, and attracting investment.

It’s why the Budget in May will be all about addressing the more persistent inflation we saw in yesterday’s data, boosting productivity, and making our economy even more resilient in the face of all this global volatility.

Australia’s proposition to the world’s investors is not that we are immune from uncertainty, but that we are well placed to manage it and grasp the opportunities that flow from it: with a stable, well‑regulated financial system; deep capital markets; a world‑leading super system, and a long track record of being a reliable home for global capital, in the fastest growing region in the world.

Citi has been an important part of that story for a century, becoming an integral part of Australia’s financial system, and now playing a key role in this defining and sometimes dangerous decade.

And as we navigate all this uncertainty together, there will be an even bigger premium on relationships, trust and experience.

So, tonight is about celebrating a century of Citi in Australia.

But it’s also about recognising the role you continue to play, in investing in Australia, in getting more capital flowing around the country, and in helping us engage with a global economy characterised by churn and change.

Thank you and once again – happy birthday.

17-2026: REMINDER – Changes to departmental email subscription services for ‘System notifications’ (IT outage notices relating to biosecurity import systems) from Sunday 01 February 2026

Source: Australia Government Statements – Agriculture

30 January 2026

Who does this notice affect?

All Biosecurity Industry Participants subscribed to receive Import Industry Advice Notice notifications from the department.

All Biosecurity Industry Participants who utilise / engage with the departments import-related IT systems for the management of imported cargo, conveyances and inspection booking services, including those who subscribe to receive email notifications for departmental Import Industry Advice Notices.

16-2026: Import conditions for fresh melons from Japan

Source: Australia Government Statements – Agriculture

30 January 2025

Who does this notice affect?

This notice affects importers, brokers and Pathway Operations Cargo – Assessments and Inspections.

What has changed?

Import conditions to import fresh melons from Japan, for human consumption, are now published on BICON. All varieties of melon fruit (Cucumis melo) are permitted to be imported. This includes muskmelon, rockmelon and honeydew melon. Import is not permitted for oriental melons (C. melo var.…

Faces of CFA – Kay Granter

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

What binds CFA members is the common goal to protect lives and property. But they are a diverse bunch – every member has a story and Faces of CFA introduces you to just some of those stories.

KAY GRANTER, STRATH CREEK-REEDY CREEK BRIGADE

What is your CFA role? 
I’m currently 2nd lieutenant and community safety coordinator.  

Why did you join? 
After living in the Dandenong Ranges as a child, the fear of bushfires was always instilled in us and always on our minds. Both my brothers were CFA members for Sassafras-Ferny Creek, The Basin and Glenburn brigades. I assisted at times to help wash the trucks. 

After moving to Strath Creek my young family endured the terrible 2009 Black Saturday bushfires that devastated our small town. I thought it was time to get out there and have a go to help my community. 

What incident has had the greatest impact on you? 
There have been many incidents, such as car accidents, that I think about. But the bushfire in Flowerdale in 2023 had the most impact on me because we were one of the first to arrive on scene. The fire was going really quickly with strong winds. It was large, widespread and heading up the surrounding hills out of reach of most vehicles. Seeing multiple aerial support come in quickly was a great relief, as was the assistance of surrounding brigades who brought their experience and knowledge.  

Who have been your mentors in CFA? 
So many CFA members from District 12 have given me support in some way or another throughout the years. However, my amazing Captain Eric Smith is always there for me and always has the time of day to assist or chat. 

Our District Instructor Tony Scicluna AFSM has an absolute wealth of knowledge and is a great guy to work with. 

So much knowledge is shared, which is fantastic. I’m always learning. 

What have been the highlights of your time in CFA? 
I think everything we do as a member is a highlight for me. After spending many years as a mum of three (all grown up now) I’ve been very fortunate to upskill my everyday life with new skills such as BA, medium rigid driving licence, community safety coordinator, chainsaw use and crew leadership skills. I really enjoy it and I’m a very proud CFA member. It gives me a sense of achievement – something I never thought I could do.  

I like to empower community members to learn more and educate themselves on how to deal with emergency situations. 

I now have two grown-up kids in the process of joining our brigade and I have a very supportive hubby. Dinners and washing machines are no longer a priority for me! 

How do you motivate your brigade members? 
I try to stay positive, see the good in things and have a laugh. I encourage others to get involved and have a go at something they ordinarily wouldn’t do. CFA is great at supporting new courses and allowing members to explore different avenues for varied levels of confidence in people. 

What lessons are you most keen to pass onto other members? 
I like to think that we are very lucky to be Involved as CFA members. It’s a great organisation that accepts people from all walks of life. We are a diverse group and we can all learn from each other. 

What do you like to do in your spare time? 
I like to spend time in the garden and my new greenhouse. I also enjoy competitive swimming, horse riding and the occasional hunt for foxes and rabbits with my son.  

Most of all, I love to spend time at home on the farm watching the view. As I live in the Valley of a Thousand Hills, it’s never boring. 

Submitted by News and Media

Review of thin capitalisation reforms

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

We have tasked the Board of Taxation to undertake an independent review of the Albanese Government’s thin capitalisation reforms.

Our thin capitalisation reforms target the excessive use of debt deductions to avoid paying tax in Australia, and are in line with the OECD’s best practice guidance.

These reforms are all about ensuring multinationals pay a fairer share of tax in Australia.

When multinationals exploit loopholes to pay less tax, they’re gaining an unfair advantage over local businesses.

As part of the independent review, the Board will consider the overall performance of the amendments in strengthening Australia’s thin capitalisation rules.

The Board will undertake public consultation to inform its final report, which we have asked it to provide within 12 months.

The independent review of the thin capitalisation reforms is a statutory requirement, stipulated when the legislation passed in April 2024.

The three big economic priorities for the Albanese Government this year are addressing inflation, productivity and global uncertainty, and ensuring multinationals pay a fairer share of tax through reforms like these is an important part of our agenda.