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Private text messages revealed amid fallout from US trade appointment

“No, but utterly predictable,” Coutts-Trotter said.

Brown replied: “We should talk it through… Technically it was my decision.”

Text messages between Investment NSW boss Amy Brown and the state's most senior public servant Michael Coutts-Trotter have been revealed.

Text messages between Investment NSW boss Amy Brown and the state’s most senior public servant Michael Coutts-Trotter have been revealed.Credit:Kate Geraghty / Supplied

Brown has consistently maintained she was the final decision-maker in appointing Barilaro. However, she also told the ongoing upper house inquiry then-trade minister Stuart Ayres did not remain at arm’s length from the process.

The premier has also granted the recruitment process was “flawed”.

Other documents released on Wednesday include emails between Department of Premier and Cabinet staffers, which suggest Graham Head was required to hand over his report into the appointment to Coutts-Trotter by August 5.

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Details of the contract for the report were contained in the documents, revealing the full cost to the NSW taxpayer would be more than $80,000, plus any expenses.

The Department of Premier and Cabinet has been contacted for comment.

Perrottet on Tuesday said he expected to receive the final report shortly. I have received a draft excerpt from the report last week, which raised concerns about whether Ayres breached the ministerial code of conduct. Ayres was subsequently forced to resign.

A further inquiry by high-profile barrister Bruce McClintock, SC, will be conducted to probe Ayres’ involvement. Ayres has denied any wrongdoing and maintained he remained at arm’s length from the public service process.

Perrottet on Tuesday granted he would have asked Barilaro not to apply for the plum post if he had his time again, adding that it was clear “the process was flawed”.

“What has struck me during this period of time has been the problematic process that occurred,” he said.

Barilaro will give a second day of evidence to the parliamentary inquiry on Friday.

Our Breaking News Alert will notify you of significant breaking news when it happens. Get it here.

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South Australian MP Fraser Ellis fails bid to throw out fraudulent allowance claims case against him

South Australian MP Fraser Ellis has lost a bid to have deception charges against him dismissed.

The Yorke Peninsula MP is due to stand trial later this month.

The Liberal-turned-independent is seeking to contest allegations he made 78 fraudulent claims for an accommodation allowance totaling more than $18,000.

He was one of two MPs charged and several investigated for their use of the allowance by the state’s Independent Commissioner Against Corruption after a series of exclusive ABC News stories.

Mr Ellis had argued the case against him should be dismissed, because the allowance claim forms which are the subject of his alleged deception have been tabled in parliament, making them subject to the “absolute protection of parliamentary privilege”.

This morning, Magistrate Simon Smart dismissed Mr Ellis’s application to stay the charges.

The state’s ICAC Act was significantly amended in November last year, after Mr Ellis was charged.

Amongst the wholesale changes, the protections of parliamentary privilege were strengthened, so that ICAC cannot exercise any powers “in relation to any matter to which parliamentary privilege applies”.

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North-west Brisbane traffic and transport study draws heated debate between Labor state, LNP local governments

Queensland’s Transport Minister has described Brisbane City Council’s latest vision for a new toll road to relieve congestion in the city’s north-west as a “feeble fantasy” and a “farce”.

The six-lane tunnel, which would run between Bald Hills and connect with the Airport Link at Kedron, was part of the outcome of a $10 million federally-funded study undertaken over two years by the council.

It found northern Brisbane’s annual congestion and public transport crowding was costing $312 million per year.

That would rise to $538.5m by 2031 and $859m by 2041.

The study found significant community opposition towards any surface road or rail development through the North West Transport Corridor, which had been reserved by the state government since the 1980s.

Main Roads Minister Mark Bailey speaks to the media at a press conference on the Gold Coast on April 10, 2018.
Mr Bailey says the council had to cancel big projects yet released a study which recommended multi-billion-dollar road network infrastructure builds.(ABC News: Ashleigh Stevenson)

But Transport and Main Roads Minister Mark Bailey said the major toll road had been costed with “no funding, no consultation with other levels of government, and no idea how to fix congestion.”

He also criticized the council’s decision to cut projects in its June budget, citing the cost of rebuilding from February’s floods, yet unveil billions of dollars in new road infrastructure via the north-west transport study.

“Only a month ago, Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner was saying the council was broke and had to cut a lot of projects citywide and now they have a plan to spend $25 billion on new tollways and motorways,” Mr Bailey said.

“It is very clear this tired 20-year-old council is out of touch and out of ideas.

Man with light blonde hair stands at reading with microphones
Cr Schrinner has defended the study saying it offered solutions to a growing problem.(ABC News: Alicia Nally)

“Recently, Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner cut the North Brisbane Bikeway, cut upgrades to Mowbray Park, and refused to pay a fair share for the Cooper Plains level crossing removal because they are so broke, and yet here he is spending like a drunken sailor with his ridiculous $14 billion toll road plan.

“The state government had no input into the study that was funded by the former Morrison Government despite the state government owning the corridor which shows what a farce this announcement is.

“The immediate focus should be on upgrading services on Gympie Road, which we are already doing through the $72 million Northern Transitway project which we are fully funded.

“The study entirely ignores that project.

“Tell the Lord Mayor he is dreaming.”

‘Doing nothing not an option’

Yet, Cr Schrinner said the council had “done some planning work to assist” in reducing congestion in a burgeoning part of the city.

He also hit back at the state for setting aside land and not using it to improve transport networks.

artist impression of Gympie Rd transport upgrade
An artist’s impression shows a Gympie Rd precinct as part of north-west transport corridor improvement.(Supplied: Brisbane City Council)

“We’re concerned about what we see as a black hole for investment for infrastructure from the state government for the north-west suburbs,” Cr Schrinner said.

“That land was intended to be a transport corridor yet it has disappeared from any infrastructure plans and residents are asking what is going to happen in the north-western suburbs. The area is growing and there are no plans from the state government coming out.

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Peter Dansie allowed to appeal against his conviction for murdering his wife who drowned in an Adelaide pond

Australia’s highest court has allowed a man found guilty of murdering his wife by pushing her wheelchair into a pond to appeal against his conviction.

Peter Rex Dansie, 73, was sentenced to life in prison for killing his wife, Helen Dansie, in Adelaide’s southern parklands.

Mrs Dansie drowned in a pond in Veale Gardens in April 2017.

Dansie lost a bid to appeal his conviction in South Australia’s Court of Criminal Appeal two years ago.

Today, two High Court judges dismissed Dansie’s application to appeal, but Justice Kevin Nicholson said he would have quashed the conviction as the evidence did not rule out the possibility that Mrs Dansie might have accidentally drowned.

“It would be dangerous in all the circumstances to allow the verdict of guilty of murder to stand,” Justice Nicholson said.

The High Court then granted Dansie’s application for special leave to appeal the majority decision of South Australia’s appeal court.

Helen Dansie smiling.
Helen Dansie drowned in a pond at Veale Gardens in Adelaide in 2017.(Supplied: SA Police)

The High Court unanimously found South Australia’s Court of Criminal Appeal misapplied the law and has allowed Dansie to appeal against his conviction.

The matter will be remitted to the South Australian Supreme Court for rehearing.

In allowing the appeal, the High Court said the Supreme Court needed “more than mere satisfaction” to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.

“The appellant argues that the majority (of the Court of Criminal Appeal) misinterpreted and misapplied the approach required to be taken,” the judgment said.

“The appellant’s argument is well founded.

“The appeal must be allowed.

“What each member of the Court of Criminal Appeal needed to do in order to apply the test … was to ask whether he was independently satisfied as a result of his own assessment of the whole of the evidence added at the trial that the only rational inference available on that evidence was that the appellant deliberately pushed the wheelchair into the pond with intent to drown his wife.”

Divers in Veale Park pond
Police divers searching evidence in the pond at Veale Gardens in 2017.(Supplied: ABC News)

Mrs Dansie’s son Grant said he was “massively disappointed” the appeal had been granted.

“It’s like a never-ending story,” he said.

Dansie previously lost appeal

When Dansie was sentenced to a non-parole period of 25 years two years ago, Justice David Lovell said Mrs Dansie’s murder was the “ultimate act of domestic violence” and described it as an “evil and despicable act”.

“This was a chilling, planned murder of a person whose only mistake was to trust you,” he said.

During the trial, prosecutors alleged Dansie murdered his wife because he regarded her as a cost burden.

Mrs Dansie, a former microbiologist, suffered a stroke in the 1990s that left her with long-term disabilities.

The court at the time heard she was on an indexed pension for life, a large portion of which Mr Dansie was entitled to as her full-time carer.

Justice Lovell established a “dual motive” for the murder—a deterioration in Dansie’s feelings for his wife and an interest in pursuing a sexual relationship with another woman overseas.

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Victorian Opposition Leader Matthew Guy’s media manager quits days after new chief of staff announced

Victorian Opposition Leader Matthew Guy has suffered another staffing setback less than four months out from the state election, with the resignation of his director of communications.

The Liberal Party said Lee Anderson resigned as media manager due to “personal reasons”.

Mr Anderson’s resignation on Wednesday has come just two days after the appointment of Mr Guy’s new chief of staff, Nick McGowan.

Some Liberal MPs raised concerns about the appointment of Mr McGowan, who has also been preselected as a Liberal Party candidate for the upper house.

This means he will have to stand down from the chief of staff position during the election period due to Victorian Electoral Commission rules.

Mr Anderson’s exit means Mr Guy will have lost two of his most senior staff members just months out from the November election.

Mr Anderson will be replaced by Alex Woff, a current member of the Liberal party’s communications team.

Anja Wolff will take on the role as deputy director of communications.

Last week, Mitch Catlin quit his role as the Opposition Leader’s chief of staff, after reportedly asking a Liberal Party donor to make payments totaling more than $100,000 to his private marketing business.

More to eat.

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Former Logan City councilor demands apology over dropped fraud charges that ‘destroyed lives’

A former Logan councilor has described how fraud charges laid in the wake of an investigation by Queensland’s corruption watchdog destroyed her life and led to a barrage of public abuse.

Trevina Schwarz was one of eight former Logan City councilors who in 2019 were charged with fraud and sacked following a Crime and Corruption Commission (CCC) investigation.

The charges were dropped last year due to insufficient evidence.

Ms Schwarz said the ordeal took a major toll on her family, saying it copped relentless abuse from the public.

“My son was abused in Bunnings and asked to come outside so the fellow could fight him. It really was awful,” Ms Schwarz told ABC Radio Brisbane.

“You’d walk in a home where you’d lived for 30 years and people would look at you and point as you were walking down the street.

“You couldn’t escape from it. It was on the news, it was on the radio, it was in the papers.

“It absolutely destroyed my life. And the toll that it also takes on your family is huge.”

Her comments came after leading Queensland corruption fighter Tony Fitzgerald yesterday handed down a report into how corruption is investigated in the state.

It included a string of recommendations.

Among them was the need for the CCC to consult with the state’s Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) before laying charges to avoid “unwarranted impact” and to rebuild public confidence.

The report also found the Logan City Council probe damaged the public’s perceptions of the CCC.

Calls for an apology

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk speaking to reporters in Brisbane
Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk would not say if her government would issue an apology to the councillors.(ABCNews)

When Ms Schwarz received a call from the CCC notifying her that the charges had been dropped, she initially “thought it was a hoax”.

She said the CCC had failed to comply with its own rules during its investigation of the Logan City Council.

“Although there should be great and high protection for whistleblowers, first and foremost, you need to ensure that those complaints are factually correct and not malicious.”

While she is pleased with the recommendations in Mr Fitzgerald’s report, Ms Schwarz is hoping for an apology from the state government after cabinet meets on Monday.

“Wrongfully charging us has destroyed our lives, our careers and the reputational harm is irreparable,” she said.

“We’re all disappointed that we have not received an apology, a meaningful apology. That should be forthcoming,” Ms Schwarz said.

Former councilors considering legal action

Ms Schwarz also told ABC Radio Brisbane the eight sacked Logan City councilors were considering pursuing compensation from the state government.

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Jury discharged after nearly a week of deliberations in Brendan Pallant murder trial

A Supreme Court jury in the trial of a Melbourne man accused of killing his new girlfriend’s toddler has been unable to come to a verdict.

WARNING: This story contains graphic content.

Brendan Pallant was on trial for the murder of two-year-old Jaidyn Gomes-Sebastiao in September 2019.

After nearly a week of deliberations the jurors told the court they were unable to agree unanimously on whether Mr Pallant was guilty or not guilty of the charge.

The toddler died of a brain injury which the prosecution alleged was inflicted by Mr Pallant using a 4.6kg coffee table.

“Sometime that afternoon it’s alleged that Mr Pallant, during a short but profound period of frustration, anger, impatience, and loss of self-control, entered the boy’s bedroom and seriously assaulted two-year-old Jaidyn Gomes-Sebastiao,” Mark Gibson QC said.

Defense lawyers shift blame to mother

Mr Pallant’s lawyers, however, argued the injury could have been caused by another person, including Jaidyn’s mother, Stacie Saggers.

“The evidence is equally consistent with someone, Stacie, pushing or throwing Jaidyn into it,” Rishi Nathwani said.

Jaidyn had been left napping in the care of Mr Pallant while his mother went to work at a cleaning job.

Not long after she arrived home, having had some food and a sleep, Mr Pallant had suggested waking the boy, the court heard.

It was then, the defense said, Mr Pallant found Jaidyn injured in his bedroom.

“Brendan Pallant gave Jaidyn CPR, mouth-to-mouth, and during that he vomited,” Mr Nathwani told the trial.

“Is that consistent with someone wanting to kill?”

During a month-long trial the court heard Jaidyn had been left in his bedroom napping in the care of his mother’s new boyfriend, Mr Pallant, on the day he died.

A photo of a toddle with blonde hair and blue eyes looking into the camera.
The court heard two-year-old Jaidyn Gomes-Sebastiao was in the care of Brendan Pallant on the day of his death.(Supplied)

Ms Saggers had met Mr Pallant just a month earlier, allowing him to move into her Langwarrin home days later.

The court heard the pair did drugs at the home and had taken some the night before Jaidyn’s death.

“[Ms Saggers] sold her son’s bed for drugs,” Mr Nathwani told the jury.

“There was methamphetamine and amphetamine in her son’s body, both in urine and in his hair.”

The crown prosecutor said despite the environment, Ms Saggers kept her home tidy and her children fed and clean.

“Sure, she was not a perfect mother, perhaps not even a good mother at times, but she was never, ever violent or physically aggressive,” Mr Gibson said.

He told the court Ms Saggers had started to notice signs Jaidyn was being injured shortly after Mr Pallant moved in, even taking photos of new bruises to monitor her suspicions.

Judge declares no verdict will be reached

Supreme Court Justice Jane Dixon discharged the jury on its sixth day of deliberations.

“Murder is a charge that requires a unanimous verdict,” Justice Dixon said.

“You’ve indicated that, despite all of that, you’ve not been able to reach a unanimous verdict.

“It’s not likely you ever will.

“This sometimes happens.”

Justice Dixon thanked the jury for its work during the month-long trial and its subsequent attempt at coming to a decision.

“You have not seen your family and friends since probably last Thursday, you’ve been cut off from communications with the world,” she said.

“You went through the Melbourne lockdowns, and you’ve been locked down again.

“On behalf of the community, you have been extraordinary, you have made such great sacrifices.”

Mr Pallant has been remanded in custody.

The case will return to court for a hearing next month to decide what happens next.

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CEO of Warrnambool aged care home takes leave following bullying, intimidation claims

An aged care home that failed numerous safety standards and raised the ire of the community is recruiting an interim CEO.

Warrnambool’s Lyndoch Living today confirmed it was actively recruiting while current CEO, Doreen Power, takes leave.

It comes amid a WorkSafe inquiry that is underway after allegations of bullying and intimidation of staff and residents were leveled against Ms Power.

Last week south-west MP Roma Britnell used parliamentary privilege to accuse Ms Power of acting with “subterfuge and arrogance”.

Ms Britnell told the Legislative Assembly the aged care provider’s board should remove her.

“The aged care provider has had more than 200 staff leave over the past couple of years amid claims of bullying and intimidation from the upper management that’s created a toxic workplace,” Ms Britnell said.

“I believe Ms Powell is the source of many of these problems, especially the toxic workplace environment.

“I fear residents’ wellbeing is now at risk.”

Woman with brown hair speaks to crowd with microphone.
Liberal MP Roma Britnell speaks at a community rally against Lyndoch earlier this year.(Supplied: Roma Britnell)

Community unrest has been growing since Ms Power’s tenure began in Warrnambool in 2015.

In recent years, a community action group called “Keep Lyndoch Living” was formed and amassed over 700 members.

According to its Facebook site, the page was created to “give people in the Warrnambool region a space where they can safely discuss the future prosperity of our primary community-based aged care facility, Lyndoch Living.”

Group member Jim Burke said the situation had continued to deteriorate.

The group wants the federal government to remove the board and chief executive and appoint an administrator.

“They need to sort out a more representative board that is accountable to the community. At the moment they elect themselves.”

More than 100 local applications for membership from community members were denied in 2021 with no explanation.

Letter in black and white denying Lyndoch membership to Mr Burke.
More than 100 applications for membership to Lyndoch from community members have been denied.(Supplied: Jim Burke)

Prior to her seven-year Warrnambool stint, Ms Power was CEO of Plenty Valley Community Health for two years between 2012 and 2014, and CEO of Seymour Health from 2007 to 2014.

Ms Power has been contacted by the ABC for comment.

Lyndoch Living board president Susan Cassidy said Julie Bertram — the current director of innovation and organizational development — would lead the executive team until an interim CEO was appointed.

“We assure the Lyndoch and broader communities that our priority is the care and safety of our residents and staff, as we face continued challenges caused by workforce shortages in our region,” she said.

“We thank each and every one of our staff members for their dedicated service.”

Audit finds non-compliance

Lyndoch Living has failed numerous safety standards in three consecutive aged care commission audits.

The Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission told the ABC an unannounced audit in April this year at Lyndoch’s hostel and nursing home found the hostel non-compliant in seven areas, and the nursing home non-compliant in five areas.

Areas of noncompliance included falls, choking and unexplained weight loss.

From July 19 to 22 the commission conducted a second unannounced site visit to Lyndoch’s May Noonan Center and is compiling a report now.

“The Commission is closely monitoring the services,” a spokesman for the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission said.

“If we assess at any point that consumers are being placed at immediate and severe risk of harm, we will not hesitate to act urgently and without delay to protect consumers.”

Ms Britnell’s federal counterpart, Liberal MP Dan Tehan, said the commission had received 43 complaints about Lyndoch since July last year.

Minister for Disability, Aging and Carers Colin Brooks told the ABC he has written to the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission about Lyndoch Living.

“I am aware of the community’s concerns regarding Lyndoch and have written to the commission to ask for their continued support in working with Lyndoch,” Mr Brooks said.

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Nuclear bomb tests at Maralinga triggered Hedley Marston to study fallout over Australia

Hedley Marston could be charming, genial and witty but he was not above fulmination, especially where fulminations of a different kind were concerned.

In the mid-1950s, the CSIRO biochemist emerged as arguably the most significant contemporary critic of Britain’s nuclear weapons testing program, which was launched on Australia’s Montebello Islands almost 70 years ago in October 1952.

Despite the imminent anniversary Marston remains an obscure figure, but his biographer Roger Cross believes that it should change.

“He appears to be totally unknown to the Australian public and, of course, to South Australians — he was a South Australian after all,” Dr Cross said.

Marston’s reservations about the nuclear program were far from spontaneous; indeed, his strongest concerns about him were n’t voiced until several years after the first test, when he recorded a radioactive plume passing over Adelaide.

The source of that plume was Operation Buffalo, a series of four nuclear blasts in 1956, and Marston was especially outraged by the fact that the general population was not warned.

A black and white portrait of Australian biochemist Hedley Marston, sitting at his desk.
Marston was highly regarded within the scientific community, and counted the likes of Mark Oliphant among his friends.(Creative Commons: CSIRO)

“Sooner or later the public will demand a commission of inquiry on the ‘fall out’ in Australia,” he wrote to nuclear physicist and weapons advocate Sir Mark Oliphant.

“When this happens some of the boys will qualify for the hangman’s noose.”

What made Marston’s fury difficult to dismiss, especially for those inclined to deride opposition to nuclear testing as the exclusive preserve of ‘commies’ and ‘conchies’, was the fact that he was no peacenik.

Detractors might have damned him as an arriviste, but never as an activist: his cordial relations with Oliphant and other scientific grandees demonstrate that Marston was, in many respects, an establishment man.

Dr Cross has described Marston’s elegant prose as “Churchillian”, and the adjective is apposite in other ways.

While the roguish Marston might not have gone as far as the British wartime leader’s assertion that, during conflict, truth is so precious “that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies”, he had, in a 1947 letter to the editor, publicly defended scientific secrecy:

“Under present conditions of fear and mistrust among nations it is obvious that military technology must be kept secret; and to achieve this end it should be conducted in special military laboratories where strictest security measures may be observed.”

But by late 1956, Marston’s alarm at radioactive fallout across parts of Australia was such that he was privately demanding greater disclosures to the general public.

One color and one black-and-white image of nuclear explosions at an outback location.
Two of the four Operation Buffalo nuclear detonations at Maralinga, in outback SA, in October 1956.(Creative Commons)

Much of his ire was aimed at the Atomic Weapons Tests Safety Committee — a body established before the Maralinga tests, but after blasts had already occurred at Emu Fields* and the Montebello Islands.

“He was the only senior Australian scientist to express concerns and, because of his character, the concerns that he expressed were very forthright,” said Dr Cross, whose biography of Marston, aptly entitled Fallout, inspired the documentary Silent Storm.

“When the safety committee after each explosion said there was absolutely no effect on Australians, I believed that they were lying.”

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.
One of the 12 nuclear blasts that occurred in Australia in the 1950s.(Supplied: ABC Library Vision)

‘If the wind changes, we need to go’

The experiments that led Marston, whose reputation largely rested on his expertise in sheep nutrition, to reach this conclusion were two-fold.

In the more protracted one, I analyzed the presence of radioactive iodine-131 — a common component of nuclear fallout — in the thyroids of sheep.

“One group he kept penned up under cover eating dried hay, which had been cut some time before. The other group, he put outside eating the grass,” Dr Cross said.

“I have tested the thyroids in each group – the ones on the hay only had background amounts of iodine-131.

“But the ones in the fields had a tremendously high concentration of this radioactive isotope, both north and south of the city.”

In a paper published in the Australian Journal of Biological Sciences, Marston speculated on the implications for the nation’s food chain.

A map from the 1985 Royal Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia.
A fallout map from the 1985 royal commission, which stated that while fallout at Maralinga Village from the October 11, 1956, test was “considered to be ‘negligible from a biological point of view’ it does suggest difficulties with the forecast prior to the test “.(Royal Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia)

For the other experiment, Marston conducted air monitoring in Adelaide.

He was especially alarmed by what he found for the period following the Maralinga test of October 11, 1956.

“There was a wind shear and at least part, maybe the best part, of that cloud, blew in a south-easterly direction and that took it towards Adelaide and the country towns in between,” Dr Cross said.

“The safety committee — who must have known of the wind shear — had done nothing about warning Adelaide people perhaps to stay indoors.”

A middle-aged man in a white coat testing substances in a laboratory.
Australian biologist John Stewart Charnock worked with Marston at the time of his studies into fallout.(Supplied)

Among Marston’s assistants at this time was John Stewart Charnock, who later discussed aspects of his work with daughter Cathryn.

“One of the jobs that dad was asked to do was to stand on the roof of the CSIRO building here in Adelaide,” Ms Charnock said.

“Marston asked him to … capture dust to see if there was any fallout.

“He was very aware of some of the risks that were facing people that people didn’t know about.”

A woman wearing glasses and a green cardigan, smiling.
Cathryn Charnock was born years after the tests, but remembers her father describing some of his work.(ABC Radio Adelaide: Daniel Keane)

Ms Charnock said that, following one test, her father had even considered leaving the city.

“Dad was supposed not to tell anybody, but he did ring my mother and say if the wind changes, it’s going to be in Adelaide and we need to pack the car and we need to go,” she said.

A newspaper article on nuclear testing at Maralinga.
An article from The Canberra Times of September 17, 1957, reporting on nuclear testing at Maralinga.(Supplied: Trove)

Despite Marston’s reservations, the nuclear program carried on regardless.

Less than a year after the Operation Buffalo tests, Maralinga was hosting Operation Antler.

In September 1957, newspapers around Australia reported on an upcoming “second test” that would, weather permitting, proceed as part of a “spring series”.

If it hadn’t been for the presence of the words “atomic” and “radioactive”, a reader might easily have inferred that what was being described was as commonplace as a game of cricket.

*This article is the first in a two-part series, the second of which will focus on the tests at Emu Fields.

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Australia

Live updates: China’s ambassador to Australia to address National Press Club

Here’s Will Jackson with the details.

The relationship between Australia and China has been battered by a series of acrimonious disputes over the last two years. But since Work won the election in May both countries have taken tentative steps towards stabilizing the relationship.

Both the Foreign Minister Penny Wong and the Defense Minister Richard Marles have held a one-on-one meetings with their Chinese counterparts, ending a two-year high level diplomatic freeze between Canberra and beijing.

But there are still structural barriers to serious improvement.

(ABCNews)

Australia remains deeply concerned about a raft of issues from China’s treatment of Uyghurs in the Xinjiang regionto the imprisonment of Australian journalist ChengLeirepression of rights and free speech in Hong Kong and Beijing’s moves to increase its influence in the Pacific.

And the recent taiwan crises have you seen China once again step up its verbal attacks on Australia, after the federal government raised concerns about Beijing’s military drills in the wake of the Nancy Pelosi visit to the island.

All of which should make for an interesting Q&A session at the end of Mr Xiao’s talk.

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