Categories
Business

Westpac, CBA and NAB banks close 37 branches, 182 jobs lost

Dozens of major bank branches are set to be closed over the next few months which will see 182 Australians lose their jobs, according to the Finance Sector Union.

In total, 37 branches will be shuttered across the nation, with the union describing the closures as reaching “crisis point”.

Westpac Group is making the most dramatic cuts with 24 branches being shut down across the country.

In NSW, Westpac branches in the suburbs of Lakemba, Engadine, Corrimal and Kingscliff will be shuttered in coming months, while Queensland’s branches in Ashmore, Nerang and Rockhampton will also be shut.

The closures will also hit Westpac’s Western Australian branches based on Mandurah and South Perthwhile the berrimah branch in the Northern Territory has also been cut.

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The Finance Sector Union said it had campaigned against branch closures for many years but is now seeking government intervention to protect local economies and save what’s left of Australia’s bank branch network.

“This latest list of closures means the big four have closed more than 550 bank branches across Australia since January 2020,” said Finance Sector Union (FSU) national secretary Julia Angrisano.

“We must act to stop the banks walking away from communities in our suburbs and towns. It’s time to examine the impact of these closures which have hit hundreds of communities across the country.”

Others set to close down as part of the Westpac Group include St George’s NSW branch in Five Dockthe Bank SA’s branches in Munno Parra and St Peterswhile the Bank of Melbourne will also lose seven branches.

The Bank of Melbourne branches include Croydon, Coburg, Fitzroy, Sunbury, Footscray, 114 William St Melb and Mornington.

Meanwhile, the NAB is closing nine branches across three states, including sites located in Lavington, Narrandera, Corrimal, Figtree, Cronulla and Maroubra in NSW, Wynnum in QLD and North Melbourne in Victoria.

Two states will be impacted by branch closures by the CBA, including the NSW suburbs of Annandale, Toongabbie and Lindfieldas well as Drysdale and Woodend in Victoria.

Ms Angrisano said communities depend on the banks to deliver financial services and feared the current trend would mean no branches in the future.

“The banks notify the FSU about upcoming closures. In this case, two banking brands are being withdrawn from the same location in Corrimal, NSW. Imagine the impact of losing two more banks in the same suburb?,” she said.

She said the banks had failed to support local communities and cost savings from branch closures were designed to increase the banks’ already huge profits.

“We need an inquiry into bank branch closures to assess the impact on local communities when the banks pull out of suburbs and towns,” she said.

“The UK has a formal ‘community impact assessment test’ and we need a similar test to ring-fence our branches and make sure banking services the public which they derive their profits from.”

A Westpac Group spokesperson said with more than five million digitally active customers, it was investing in services to complement how our customers choose to bank.

“Declining customer use of branches means that in some instances, we may take a difficult decision to leave a branch location. In these instances, we continue to support our customers with access to banking services via Bank@Post, telephone, mobile and virtual banking,” they said.

“We take steps to ensure customers are notified in advance about the changes and are directly connected with the services they need to continue to do their banking. For those who are new to digital banking, or may require more assistance with the changes, we provide dedicated support and education to make the transition easier.

They added that the “majority” of affected employees would secure a new role within the group.

Krissie Jones, from NAB executive retail, said as more and more customers are choosing to bank online, we’ve made the difficult decision to close some branches that receive less customer visits.

“Increasingly Australians are banking digitally, with more than 94 per cent of customer interactions now taking place over the phone, by video or online,” she said.

“While these branches will no longer be there, we will still be there for our customers – just in different ways,” she said. “Over the past few years, fewer customers are coming into branches to do their banking and foot traffic has lessened, which has been accelerated by Covid.”

She added there will be no job losses at NAB and the branch team will also be working with customers over the coming weeks to talk with them about the various banking alternatives available.

CBA did not respond to news.com.au’s request for comment before publication.

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Categories
Technology

How ‘Dying Light 2”s parkour stumbles into mediocrity

System Shack is NME’s new column that explores the mechanics behind the industry’s most successful games. This week, Rick Lane takes a tumble in Dying Light 2.

Thus far in SystemShack, I’ve only explored mechanics that help to make their respective games great. But since we tend to learn more from our mistakes than our successes, it’s worth occasionally delving into a game where the core ideas don’t quite work. By far the highest-profile disappointment of this year is Dying Light 2Techland’s free-running, zombie-bashing sequel that simply fails to live up to the fun of the original.

There’s a lot wrong with Dying Light 2. The story is turgid and overwrought. The evolving cityscape that Techland hyped up prior to release is way less involved than what the studio promised. Even the day/night juxtaposition, fundamental to the point it’s alluded to in the game’s title, is rendered insignificant by the game’s peculiar structure.

But the game’s most notable flaws are found in its parkour, the acrobatic movement system that lets players leap, roll, and climb across the rooftops of Villedor to evade the city’s zombie hordes. dying light‘s combination of free-running and zombie survival put the game on the map, and having a whole new city to parkour across was key to the appeal of the sequel.

Dying Light 2
Dying Light 2. Credit: Techland

On paper, Dying Light 2 does much to improve upon the first game’s parkour. It adds a bunch of additional abilities to the player’s skillset, like wall-running, dashes, and even a double-jump (which doesn’t make a whole lot of sense, but then again, it is a game with zombies in it) . The environment is also built to better suit free-running, with the player able to utilize objects like rope-swings, ziplines, and pipes that you can slide down to reach the ground. Most importantly of all, there are fewer seams in the parkour’s move-set, with animations designed to link elegantly together for a smoother experience.

Logically, all of this should facilitate more immersive free-running. But the way Techland implements these ideas instead makes the parkour far less enjoyable. To begin with, Techland’s attempt to smooth out the parkour instead serves to remove much of the weight and momentum behind it, because it increases the gap between the player’s input and what happens on screen. Look closely at any parkour video for Dying Light 2, and you can see the game compensating for what it deems player error, artificially stretching out jumps and redirecting Aiden to land on specific obstacles. The result might look more stylish, but it feels devoid of impact and physicality, less like you’re inhabiting a character and more like you’re a puppet on a wire.

This is by far the biggest flaw with Dying Light 2‘s parkour, but the issue is compounded by a couple of other factors. First, a huge amount of the game’s platforming potential is locked behind a skill upgrade tree. Such upgrade trees are fairly typical in modern open-world games, but Dying Light 2‘s system completely hobbles the parkour for the first ten hours of the game. Not only does it lock away advanced moves like wall-running and the ability to jump off enemies. It prevents you from doing basic things like jumping up to higher ledges and maintaining their grip on a handhold for more than a few seconds. whereas dying light‘s parkour was liberating, your main defense against the zombies, Dying Light 2‘s parkour is restricted and unsatisfying.

Dying Light 2 Stay Human key art
Dying Light 2 Stay Human. Credit: Techland

This problem does eventually go away. By the time you reach the game’s second act, you will have unlocked most of the basic parkour skills and can enjoy the system for what it is. But this problem is almost immediately replaced by another, which is that Dying Light 2‘s second act renders the game’s parkour system null and void. Act 2 takes place in Villedor’s downtown, all glittering skyscrapers too tall to climb by hand and too far apart to jump between. Instead, this moving around downtown revolves largely around a parachute, which lets you glide between skyscrapers and access them from the ground with the use of updrafts.

The parachute can be fun to play around with, but it also lets you go pretty much anywhere in Villedor’s downtown. This means that, having spent hours slowly unraveling the potential of Dying Light 2‘s parkour, the game suddenly introduces a system that drastically reduces the need for your free-running skills. Just at the point where the parkour becomes interesting, the game all but replaces it with a movement system that’s far less interactively engaging.

The missteps Techland makes with Dying Light 2‘s parkour becomes a lens through which to view the larger problems of the game. Techland clearly wants Dying Light 2 to be a more lavish and culturally significant experience than the first game, which is why it dedicates so many of its resources to storytelling. But it loses sight of what made the original game fun in the process, and the results are a less satisfying experience all around.

If you enjoyed this column, check out last week’s SystemShack – where Rick explores what makes Elden Ring‘s Guard Counters so unique.

Categories
Sports

Josh Reynolds says Newcastle Knights course of action with David Klemmer is a ‘joke’

Former Blues five-eighth Josh Reynolds said there had to be more to an ongoing situation involving his old teammate David Klemmer, labeling Newcastle’s course of action this week as a “joke”.

The fiery prop was handed a breach notice by the club for failing to come off the field when directed to leave by trainer Hayden Knowles on Sunday’s loss to Canterbury.

He has been dropped for the Knights’ clash against the Tigers on Sunday afternoon, leaving Reynolds in disbelief.

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“I honestly thought it was a gee up,” he said on Big Sports Breakfast.

“It’s honestly the biggest joke I’ve ever, ever heard if they’re even considering sacking him.”

Klemmer joined the Knights from the Bulldogs, where he and Reynolds played together for five seasons, back in 2018 – and was hailed as a transformative signing for their forward pack.

Reynolds said that Klemmer’s aggression and attitude was what made him an effective player.

“First of all, when you sign a player – the CEO will be like ‘I want you to be passionate for this jersey’,” he said.

“He just wants to be out there, he’s a fit front rower. You’ve got a guy who’s shown a bit of emotion because he didn’t want to come off at that time, and you’re saying you’re going to sack him because of that? Honestly, they don’t deserve him.”

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Reynolds said that the incident during Sunday’s game was something that you would see every single week, at any level of the sport.

“It’s the heat of the moment, heat of the battle that his has happened – it’s not even a thing,” he said.

“They probably had a beer after the game.

“There’s got to be more to it, there just has to be.”

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Categories
Australia

Adelaide City Council renames laneway in honor of musician Paul Kelly

Adelaide City Council is renaming a laneway after singer-songwriter Paul Kelly, with the music icon saying he is “honoured” by the gesture.

The newly named Paul Kelly Lane runs from Flinders Street to Pirie Street, behind the Adelaide Town Hall.

It features a series of artworks that light up and contain lyrics from various Paul Kelly songs.

Kelly was born and raised in the Adelaide suburb of Norwood and several of his songs reference places in the city.

“I’m honored to be a part of this musical laneway project and I’m glad the lane is so close to the Adelaide Town Hall where I’ve had an association for over 50 years, from playing trumpet at school speech nights, attending concerts and, later on, doing my own shows,” he said.

Adelaide Lord Mayor Sandy Verschoor said Paul Kelly Lane — previously called Pilgrim Lane, after a church next to it — would become a destination for his fans.

“Our city has an incredible musical history and Paul Kelly is an icon,” she said.

“We have such great musicians who come from this city and continue to come from this city.”

A street sign that says Paul Kelly Lane
Pilgrim Lane was renamed in honor of Kelly as part of the City of Music program.(ABC NewsRichard Davies)

South Australian artist Heidi Kenyon created the “love” light boxes along the laneway which quote some of Kelly’s famous songs.

“Really it’s just thinking about different forms of love and I guess love as a theme in song writing,” she said.

“For me, Paul Kelly speaks to love and friendship and kinship.

“I wanted it to be accessible and for people to be able to walk past and piece together some of the lyrics.”

Adelaide has been championing its musical history by naming several laneways after artists with ties to the city.

“The city of Adelaide is committed to celebrating Adelaide’s status as a world UNESCO City of Music,” Ms Verschoor said.

“Paul Kelly is the fourth City of Music laneway to be officially opened.

“We have Sia Furler, Cold Chisel, No Fixed Address [and] now Paul Kelly and the Angels will be joining. And I just said to Paul we will make a laneway for Archie Roach and Ruby Hunter.”

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Play Video.  Duration: 5 minutes 32 seconds

Paul Kelly sings his classic How to Make Gravy on News Breakfast last year.(abcnews)

The Angels will be the next band to be honoured, with a lane off Gawler Place being renamed in their honour.

A lane in the western part of the CBD was named after Cold Chisel in March as part of the council’s planned City of Music Laneways Trail.

Lindes Lane, off Rundle Mall, was renamed No Fixed Address Lane earlier that month, after the Aboriginal reggae rock band that formed in Adelaide in 1979.

Sia Furler Lane, off Morphett Street, was also renamed in March.

Adelaide’s CBD also has a Don Lane and North Adelaide has a Lois Lane.

Melbourne renamed AC/DC Lane in 2004.

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Categories
US

Fearing looters, Kentucky flood victims refuse to leave wrecked homes

“At least half can’t walk out of their doors to get the things they need,” he said. “They’re stuck in these hollers and they can’t get out.”

Kevin Kelly, a spokesperson for Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, said rescuers with the agency have delivered more than 1,760 hot trays of food, 500 sandwiches, 39 cases of water, several cases of laundry detergent, cleaning supplies and diapers, as well as several air conditioners and generators to residents in hard-to-reach areas without power.

In some cases, rescue workers were saddling up and delivering food and water on horseback.

For many flood survivors, the cavalry can’t come soon enough.

“They’re wishing they could get out,” Joanne Miller said of her 67-year-old father, Chester Marshall, who is hunkered down in his Perry County home with her teenage son and her 5-year-old granddaughter because flooding wiped out the local road. “They can’t get their car out of the driveway.”

Miller, who is 45 and lives in nearby Breathitt County, said she’s been using Facebook messenger to stay in touch with her 18-year-old son Jacob Marshall because they don’t have a landline or cellphones.

“I talked to him this morning,” Miller said. “I told him that there was a woman that was gonna come over there hopefully today and he said, ‘Mom, we could use anything that we can get right now’.”

Compounding the misery, the worst-hit areas in eastern Kentucky like Perry County were expected to be blanketed by high heat and humidity that will make it feel close to 100 degrees for the next two days.

“It will certainly slow down operations,” said Dustin Jordan of the National Weather Service. “Anytime you’re having to deal with more heat, you’ve got to move slower, you’ve got to go at a little bit slower pace.”

Beshear echoed that as he announced the opening of eight cooling centers where workers will be “bringing in water by the truckloads.”

“It’s going to get really, really hot,” Beshear warned. “And that is now our new weather challenge.”

Categories
Business

Facebook user’s Coles butter photo divides people online

One savvy shopper who scored a bargain on butter has hit back at critics who told her she shouldn’t have cleared the shelves.

The woman took to popular Facebook page Markdown Addicts Australia to share her bargain from Coles in Lake Haven, NSW.

She said she found 500g packs of Western Star butter for just $1.88 – down from its usual price of $7.50.

The woman revealed she had purchased all the butter available in the store that had been marked down.

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Some were quick to judge the woman for her actions, saying it’s fine to take advantage of a sale but she should have left some for others.

“During these hard times and so many people doing it tough I would have left some for someone else. But that’s just me,” one person said.

Another expressed disappointment as it was also their local store – and the brand of butter they use.

But the original poster was quick to defend herself against anyone who questioned her actions.

“All you clowns commenting, ‘Of course I did’ or ‘I would’ve left some’: I left shelves and shelves of meat, didn’t take a single thing, so I did leave some for others,” she wrote.

“But I bake every week so butter this cheap I wouldn’t go past.

“And no I’m not sorry because butter is expensive and I just happened to be lucky today.”

Others defended the woman – with one person adding that they would have taken the butter and all of the meat.

Another said: “As someone who works in a supermarket, thank you!

“We hate having to bin products so if you see it, buy it! We don’t care how much you buy (unless there is a limit for some reason). Take it all! Right place, right time.”

One group member congratulated the woman for her actions.

“Good on you for grabbing some. Baking brings lots of joy (and sometimes tears, when things don’t go right). Keep doing what you love, and I would have taken some too.”

Read related topics:cabbages

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Categories
Technology

Google Meet and Google Duo begin confusing merger

Google has begun the next phase of merging its Duo and Meet video chat apps into one service.

The brand sent out an update on Wednesday, which will change the Google Duo icon to Google Meet. The update is largely aesthetic but is set to roll out for Android and iOS devices over the coming weeks. You can expect to receive a home screen notification explaining how Google Duo has been merged into Google Meet.

Google services (YouTube, Gmail, Chrome, Duo, Meet, Google Podcasts) icons app on smartphone screen.
Koshiro K/Shutterstock

The brand detailed in June that it has plans to meld the two chat services into a more professional video meeting system, which will be branded under a single name, Google Meet. The transition quickly began in July with Google Google started making changes to the system, moving several Meet features onto Duo, including:

  • Custom virtual backgrounds for video communication
  • meeting scheduling
  • In meeting chat rooms
  • In-call live-share of content
  • Real-time closed captions
  • Video call limit increased from 32 to 100 participants
  • Google tools integration with Gmail, Google Calendar, Assistant, Messages, and more.
  • The brand also sent out an update, changing the app icon to “Google Meet (original).”

TechCrunch noted that many frequent Google Meet users likely wouldn’t have noticed the icon shift as a major change. However, once the August update hits devices, they will be forced to notice the transition. The publication also added as the merge continues, you’ll need a Google account to access the unique Meet features. Previously, Duo as a call app only required a phone number.

As the merge culminates around September, everyone will see the new Google Meet icon and app name, and those who want to install Google video messaging service for the first time will have to assess the new Google Meet app, which will be available at the Google Play Store or Apple App Store.

The Google Meet (original) app will be available for some time, but it will eventually be retired, with its users receiving a recommendation to update to the new application.

Google is also updating its Google Meet branding on its Duo on the Web services as of Wednesday; however, transitioning that platform completely to the new system is planned over the next several months, the brand said.

The fate of Google Duo being merged into Google Meet seems to simply be a numbers game, as opposed to scrapping the app altogether. 9to5Google noted in June that Google Duo has 5 billion Android downloads, in comparison to Google Meet, which has over 100 million downloads.

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Categories
Sports

NRL 2022: Canberra Raiders still filthy with ‘arrogant’ Penrith Panthers, spiteful rivalry

Canberra are planning an ambush on premiers Penrith in the ACT on Saturday night, fueled by simmering bad blood between the two clubs.

The Raiders don’t like the Panthers as a result of incidents on and off the field over the past two seasons.

Both last year and this year, the Penrith home crowd has mocked the iconic Raiders ‘Viking Clap’, in which fans slowly clap their hands above their heads as the team takes the field.

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The Raiders also haven’t forgotten an incident in which the Panthers scored a try and Panthers center Stephen Crichton attempted to include Raiders prop Joe Tapine in the celebrations, prompting an ugly push and shove between more than half the players on the field.

“We don’t like their attitude – plain and simple,” a senior Raiders officials told me.

“We have been waiting for this game and are planning an ambush.

“They are arrogant and we aim to bring them down a few pegs.”

Missing star halves Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai, the premiers are vulnerable against a Raiders team desperate for a win to keep their final hopes alive.

Canberra currently sit ninth on the table, behind the Roosters for that coveted finals spot due to an inferior for and against.

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Categories
Australia

Catholic Church to rely on ‘Ellis defence’ in civil damages claim involving Cardinal George Pell

The Catholic Church is using a controversial legal tactic in a bid to be excused from a civil damages claim lodged in the Victorian Supreme Court involving Cardinal George Pell.

A man is suing the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne and Cardinal Pell for damages, claiming he suffered nervous shock after learning of allegations Cardinal Pell sexually assaulted his son when he was a choirboy at St Patrick’s Cathedral in East Melbourne in 1996.

In 2018, Cardinal Pell was found guilty of the assault, but the High Court unanimously quashed the conviction in 2020.

The Cardinal has always maintained his innocence.

Church calls upon ‘Ellis defence’

In a preliminary hearing in the Victorian Supreme Court today, the Archdiocese indicated it wanted to rely on what is known as the ‘Ellis defence’ to be excused from the case.

The Ellis defense emerged out of a 2007 NSW Court of Appeal judgment that prevented an abuse survivor suing the Church because it was not a legal entity.

Survivors have long complained about the Church using the Ellis defence, and in 2018 the Victorian Parliament passed legislation that required unincorporated associations like the Church to nominate an entity that is capable of being sued.

But lawyers for the Archdiocese argued that legislation did not apply in this case because the father of the choirboy was not the primary victim of the alleged abuse.

The facade of St Patrick's Cathedral reaches into a cloudy sky.
The civil damages claim relates to allegations of abuse at St Patrick’s Cathedral in 1996.(ABC News: Danielle Bonica)

The father’s barrister, Julian Burnside QC, disagreed, arguing the 2018 legislation applied to both primary victims and their families.

“What our learned friends’ submission amounts to is this: if the victim of child abuse dies then the family has no remedy, they have no-one they can sue,” Mr Burnside said.

“Now that’s plainly wrong in our submission.”

Justice Michael McDonald has reserved his decision on whether to excuse the Archdiocese.

Archdiocese pledges to pay any potential damages

If the Archdiocese is excused, Cardinal Pell would remain a defendant.

In a letter to the court, solicitors for the Archdiocese indicated that even if the Church avoided liability it would still pay any damages, should the judge find against Cardinal Pell.

“If the plaintiff is awarded damages against the second defendant [George Pell] the Archdiocese will ensure that the award is paid by indemnifying the second defendant in respect of the award,” the letter said.

The father of the choirboy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, launched his case last month.

His son died of a drug overdose in 2014 and the father only learned of the allegations against Cardinal Pell the following year.

The father is claiming general damages, special damages and seeking compensation for past loss of earning capacity and past and future medical expenses.

His solicitor Lisa Flynn said the High Court’s decision to quash Cardinal Pell’s conviction would not affect the civil proceedings.

“The High Court made some decisions in relation to the criminal prosecution against [George] Pell, our case is a civil case against George Pell and the Catholic Archdiocese,” she said.

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Categories
US

In S. Korea, Pelosi avoids public comments on Taiwan, China

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — After infuriating China over her trip to Taiwan, US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi met South Korean political leaders in Seoul on Thursday but avoided making direct public comments on cross-Strait relations that could have further increased regional tensions.

Pelosi, the first incumbent House speaker to visit Taiwan in 25 years, said Wednesday in Taipei that the American commitment to democracy on the self-governing island and elsewhere “remains ironclad.” In response, China announced it would launch its largest military maneuvers aimed at Taiwan in more than a quarter of a century.

After visiting Taiwan, Pelosi and other members of Congress flew to South Korea — a key US ally where about 28,500 American troops are deployed — on Wednesday evening, as part of an Asian tour that included stops in Singapore and Malaysia.

She met South Korean National Assembly Speaker Kim Jin Pyo and other senior members of Parliament on Thursday. After that hour-long meeting, Pelosi spoke about the bilateral alliance, forged in blood during the 1950-53 Korean War, and legislative efforts to support a push to boost ties but did n’t directly mention her Taiwan visit de ella or the Chinese protests.

“We also come to say to you that a friendship, a relationship that began from urgency and security, many years ago, has become the warmest of friendships,” Pelosi said in a joint news conference with Kim. “We want to advance security, economy and governance in the inter-parliamentary way.”

Neither Pelosi nor Kim took questions from journalists.

Kim said he and Pelosi shared concerns about North Korea’s increasing nuclear threats. He said the two agreed to support their governments’ push to establish denuclearization and peace on the Korean Peninsula based on both strong deterrence against North Korea and diplomacy.

Later in the day, Pelosi planned to visit an inter-Korean border area that is jointly controlled by the American-led UN Command and North Korea, a South Korean official said requesting anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak to media on the matter .

If that visit occurs, Pelosi would be the highest-level American to go to the Joint Security Area since then-President Donald Trump went there in 2019 for a meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

Sitting inside the 4-kilometer (2.5-mile)-wide Demilitarized Zone, a buffer created at the end of the Korean War, the JSA is the site of past bloodshed and a venue for numerous talks. US presidents and other top officials have often traveled to the JSA and other border areas to reaffirm their security commitment to South Korea.

Any critical statement from North Korea by Pelosi is certain to draw a furious response from Pyongyang. On Wednesday, the North’s Foreign Ministry slammed the United States over her Taiwan trip, saying that “the current situation clearly shows that the impudent interference of the US in internal affairs of other countries.”

Pelosi will speak by phone Thursday afternoon with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, who is on a vacation this week, according to Yoon’s office. No face-to-face meeting has been arranged between them. Yoon, a conservative, took office in May with a vow to boost South Korea’s military alliance with the United States and take a tougher line on North Korean provocations.

Pelosi’s Taiwan visit has angered China, which views the island nation as a breakaway province to be annexed by force if necessary. China views visits to Taiwan by foreign officials as recognizing its sovereignty.

“Today the world faces a choice between democracy and autocracy,” Pelosi said in a short speech during a meeting with Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen on Wednesday. “America’s determination to preserve democracy, here in Taiwan and around the world, remains ironclad.”

The Biden administration and Pelosi have said the United States remains committed to the so-called one-China policy, which recognizes Beijing but allows informal relations and defense ties with Taipei. The administration discouraged but did not prevent Pelosi from visiting.

The military exercises that China launched in response to Pelosi’s Taiwan visit started Thursday, the Chinese military said. They were expected to be the biggest aimed at Taiwan since 1995, when China fired missiles in a large-scale exercise to show its displeasure over a visit by then-Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui to the US

China also already flew fighter jets and other war planes toward Taiwan, and blocked imports of citrus and fish from Taiwan.

Tsai pushed back firmly against Beijing’s military exercises, parts of which will enter Taiwanese waters.

“Facing deliberately heightened military threats, Taiwan will not back down,” Tsai said at her meeting with Pelosi. “We will firmly uphold our nation’s sovereignty and continue to hold the line of defense for democracy.”

Taiwan’s Defense Ministry on Thursday called the Chinese drills “unreasonable actions in an attempt to change the status quo, destroy the peace and stability of the region.”

“Our national military will continue to strengthen its alertness level, and every squadron will conduct normally their daily training in their usual places of operation,” it added.

In Washington, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby sought to tamp down fears. He told ABC’s “Good Morning America” on Wednesday that US officials “don’t believe we’re at the brink now, and there’s certainly no reason for anybody to be talking about being at the brink going forward.”

Addressing Beijing’s threats, Pelosi said she hopes it’s clear that while China has prevented Taiwan from attending certain international meetings, “that they understand they will not stand in the way of people coming to Taiwan as a show of friendship and of support.”

Pelosi noted that congressional support for Taiwan is bipartisan, and she praised the island’s democracy. She stopped short of saying that the US would defend Taiwan militarily and emphasized that Congress is “committed to the security of Taiwan, in order to have Taiwan be able to most effectively defend themselves.”

On Thursday, the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations called for calm in the Taiwan Strait, urging against any “provocative action.” ASEAN foreign ministers meeting in Phnom Penh, Cambodia for a regional forum said they were concerned the situation could “destabilize the region and eventually could lead to miscalculation, serious confrontation, open conflicts and unpredictable consequences among major powers.”

Pelosi’s focus has always been the same, she said, going back to her 1991 visit to Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, when she and other lawmakers unfurled a small banner supporting democracy two years after a bloody military crackdown on protesters at the square. That visit was also about human rights and what she called dangerous technology transfers to “rogue countries.”

Pelosi’s trip heightened US-China tensions more than visits by other members of Congress because of her position as leader of the House of Representatives. The last House speaker to visit Taiwan was Newt Gingrich in 1997.

China and Taiwan, which split in 1949 after a civil war, have no official relations but multibillion-dollar business ties.

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Wu reported from Taipei Taiwan.

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Associated Press writer David Rising in Phnom Penh, Cambodia contributed to this report.

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