Scroll down for the latest news and updates.
Key Events
PM vows ‘full support’ to Fiji in the event of an attack
An attack on Fiji would “trigger full support for Fiji”, Anthony Albanese says.
The Prime Minister said the security agreement and the alliance was “not about troops in each other’s nations” but that it will allow “discussions about specifics” on defence co-operation.
“It will allow for a clearer area of co-operation and requests to be made over the full suite of challenges that confront our national security in 2026, that comes not just from traditional ways … but areas like cyber security and other areas as well,” the Australian Prime Minister said.
Meta vows to crackdown on ‘dangerous’ anti-Semitic content
Meta officials have told the Royal Commission that people are using the terms “Zionism” or “Zionist” as a “coded word” online content to evade anti-Semitisim standards on their platforms Facebook, Instagram, Threads and WhatsApp.
An official for the tech giant told a hearing on Monday that Meta has been removing content that uses alternative words or code words in place of “Jews”, as it classifies these terms as anti-Semitic and fails their online standards.
Meta’s director of content policy Benjamin Good appeared via video link from the US and explained how the tech giant handles anti-Semitic content and the growing trend of coded messaging.
Mr Good said Meta had been cracking down on anti-Semitic tropes such as claiming Jewish people controlled governments, the media, or financial institutions.
Australia and Fiji strike new military alliance
Australia has struck a sweeping new defence alliance with Fiji as the Albanese government seeks to curb China’s rising influence in the Pacific.
The Ocean of Peace Alliance, also known as the Veitacini Treaty, will see Fiji become just Australia’s fourth military alliance partner after the United States, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his Fijian counterpart Sitiveni Rabuka signed the document in the capital Suva on Monday, which will allow both countries to “invite any other Pacific state” to join.
New youth bail laws dismissed as ‘political theatre’
The Queensland government’s integration of bail laws into its signature “Adult Crime, Adult Time” legislation has been dismissed by experts as both sloganeering and unnecessary.
However, increasingly tougher sentences and treatment for children and teenagers found guilty of serious crimes have become a cornerstone of the Crisafulli government’s tough-on-crime measures.
The premier, elected in 2024 after campaigning on the laws, has increased the number of offences eligible for adult punishment since coming to office.
Mr Crisafulli used his keynote address on Sunday at the LNP state convention to pledge a new offence for under-agers who breach bail.
“We need to continue to have consequences for actions to make sure that we continue to restore safety,” he told delegates.
“If you’re a repeat offender, you’re wielding a machete, you’re stealing cars, you’re breaking into people’s homes ... if you breach bail, you will go to jail.”
AAP
Albanese gets traditional Fiji welcome



Typhoon Bavi brings catastrophic winds to Pacific
Super Typhoon Bavi is crossing the Mariana Islands in the western Pacific Ocean, lashing Guam, Tinian and Saipan and blasting Rota with catastrophic winds and threatening an area still recovering from another destructive storm earlier this year.
The US National Weather Service warned residents to take cover as the Category 5 storm moved through the island chain, parts of which are the US commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands and the US territory of Guam, about 6000km west of Hawaii and 2500km east of the Philippines.
The weather service said Bavi’s eyewall was expected to make landfall at Rota - a territory of fewer than 2000 people northeast of Guam - shortly after dawn on Monday, with “catastrophically destructive” winds up to 290km/h.
Gusts to 350km were possible.
The US islands are a strategic defence hub in the western Pacific, hosting US military training facilities and bases including Andersen Air Force Base, Naval Base Guam and Marine Corps Base Camp Blaz.
Reuters
Three of slain Iran leader’s four sons attend funeral
Three sons of slain Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei have prayed beside his coffin and those of four other family members but Mojtaba, the son who succeeded him as Iran’s supreme leader, did not make an appearance.
State TV showed Mostafa, Meysam and Masoud Khamenei praying behind the coffins laid out in the vast courtyard of Tehran’s Imam Khomeini Grand Mosalla, a sprawling religious complex.
Their father, alongside several other members of the family, was killed in an air strike when the United States and Israel launched a war on Iran on February 28.
The conflict, which raged for several weeks before the sides reached a shaky ceasefire, has caused death and destruction across the region and left Iran’s theocratic government, backed by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, in power.
In a show of public devotion to the state and revolutionary zeal, the Islamic Republic is staging a week of mass funeral processions for Khamenei, including taking his remains to Shi’ite religious sites in neighbouring Iraq.
Reuters
Marles backs Albo’s record on women after Kylie Minogue ‘shag’ apology
Anthony Albanese’s deputy Richard Marles has defended the Prime Minister’s record on women after he was forced to apologise for crass comments about wanting to “shag” Australian pop star Kylie Minogue.
Mr Albanese was drawn into a “Shag, marry, date” discussion when appearing on YouTube via Nova’s Bush Deep podcast last week, but on Monday issued a statement saying: “I apologise unequivocally for the comments.”
In an interview with the ABC, Mr Marles noted the PM had apologised but insisted the Albanese government’s record on women was “there for all to see”.
“It’s a government that is led by a person that I know very, very closely, who is utterly committed to elevating the place of women within our society. In respect of those comments, he has apologised unequivocally.”
Federal police reportedly investigating death threats against Indian PM Modi
Defence Minister Richard Marles is declining to comment on the details of apparent death threats towards India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi ahead of his visit this week to Melbourne.
The alleged threat, posted on Facebook, reportedly said: “The roof tops of the stadium better close during the event or he will be coming to Australia for his death.”
An AFP spokesperson said the organisation “has no comment,” while Mr Marles told the ABC on Monday that security arrangements for visiting leaders “are taken completely seriously”.
‘Our plan is to win outright’: Angus Taylor
Opposition Leader Angus Taylor says the Coalition intends to win the next election outright and has no plan to form a coalition with One Nation to take office.
Over the weekend, Liberal frontbencher Dan Tehan tried to play down the prospect of teaming up with Pauline Hanson’s populist party to defeat Labor.
On Monday morning, Mr Taylor told Channel 9 the Coalition has no plan to govern with One Nation.
“We’ve got no plan for that. We want to win the next election. I should say, by the way, to people watching, it’s still a couple of years away. It’s a long way away”.
“We’ve got no plan to enter into a coalition with One Nation. Our plan is to win outright.”
Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.
Sign up for our emails