Wednesday 01-04-2026 5:52am

In favour of the robots …

Amazon has declared that robots "aren't after your jobs", instead they are set to lift average Australian earnings by $6500 a year and help turbocharge productivity. A study from ACIL Allen, which Amazon commissioned, has revealed that robotics and automation technologies could inject up to $201bln into Australia's economy by 2040 as "physical artificial intelligence" transforms the blue-collar workforce. But Amazon Robotics chief technologist Tye Brady said the savings would not come from machines replacing humans. It comes as job anxiety is high, with Amazon sacking 16,000 people, mainly in corporate roles, citing AI. However, at its warehouses, it is hiring, even where it employs its most advanced robotics. It is spending $750m building a new robotics fulfilment centre in Queensland that will create 1000 "permanent local jobs" across engineering, IT, operations and technical support. "Jobs will change. There's no doubt about that. But that's not at the expense of people," Mr Brady said. Mr Brady said robotics will require more skilled rather than entry-level workers, which will lead to higher wages and Amazon has so far "upskilled" more than 700,000 employees. The report found that strengthening the robotics sector could generate an average of 128,900 new full-time equivalent jobs each year between 2026 and 2040. But the economic uplift hinges on Australia achieving a set of aspirational targets, including doubling the country's industrial robot density and boosting the adoption of service robots in non-manufacturing sectors by 15%. According to the analysis, this technological shift would lead to a cumulative $1.44 trillion increase in Australia's real GDP over 15 years, primarily by driving productivity gains across various industries.


 SPORT:

Waiting for Molly with baited breath!

Molly Picklum is a wonderful character. Warm, engaging, hilarious. We eagerly await her speech at the World Surf League awards. Everyone’s dolled up and gorgeous and she’s in soaringly high spirits while rubbing shoulders with the kings and queens of her sport. The room is aglow with ebullience, legends and stoke.

A mesmerised Will Swanton reports in this morning's Oz, Kelly Slater, Stephanie Gilmore, Layne Beachley, Mick Fanning, Pam Burridge and Rabbit Bartholomew are among 15 world champions in this wall-to-wall gathering of boardriding’s blushing best. [click to continue reading]

Pre-formalities, Picklum’s in comedienne mode, cracking jokes, hugging and high-fiving everyone, poking fun at herself, engaging in a bit of good-natured banter. She’s just a joy to have in your orbit. Just one of those people. You know those people? I can't even look at you without laughing, says Caroline Marks, the Floridian beaten by Picklum for the world title at Fiji’s Cloudbreak last year.

Can't wait for Molly’s speech, some snappy-looking dude says during an intermission at some snappy-looking joint at Torquay. We're expecting a comedy routine. Knock-knock jokes and taking the mickey and having her audience in stitches. Thank you and goodnight! Try the veal!

Pickles accepts the prestigious Women’s World Champion silverware from Beachley, the seven-time world champion, grabs the microphone … and we fall silent for a few minutes. I haven't seen this on the horizon. We've underestimated her. She’s deep-and-meaningful. Still warm, still caring, but more heartfelt than in girly hysterics.

Firstly, thanks so much for having me, she says bashfully after a video package of her life is shown on the biggish screen.

Everyone looks so beautiful tonight. Watching that video is such a trip. I feel like I'm still that young little girl from North Shelley Beach watching Steph, Carissa (Moore), Lakey (Peterson). Sitting in my chair tonight, I kept hearing the word 'inspiring.' For me, the whole time being a competitor and having such good people and brilliant surfers next to you, you can feel so threatened. I turned that around last year.

Picklum’s win over Marks at Cloudbreak was one of the highest sporting moments I've witnessed. Two young women going hammer-and-tong on a formidable reef.

I'd been thinking last year no, these girls are way too good for me, Picklum says. I really did keep turning up feeling quite threatened. I changed my perspective to really start feeling inspired by all my peers. I do want to start with us ladies. I know I won last year, but I feel like I'm just part of something unfolding that is so much bigger than our sport.

It’s happening in all sports, but especially surfing. To all the girls, I have such good relationships with you personally. On a professional scale, you guys push so, so hard out in the water, and that pushes me, day in and day out. I feel like our sport wouldn't be where it is today without the women before us and without us now looking at each other, laughing, giggling, and pushing each other over the ledge at Chopes.


 STOCKMARKET:

Confirmed correction territory order of the day

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq edged lower Monday afternoon as optimism from President Donald Trump’s comments on U.S.-Iran talks was offset by the president’s new warnings to Tehran and a widening of the Middle East war, Reuters updated on today's website. [click to continue reading]

Trump said the U.S. was in serious discussions with a more reasonable regime to end the war but repeated his warning to open the Strait of Hormuz or risk U.S. attacks on Iranian oil wells and power plants. Iran described U.S. peace proposals as unrealistic.

Investors have been focused on how oil prices will impact the global economy after they shot up since the start of the war.

The administration continues to send mixed messages, said Rick Meckler, partner at Cherry Lane Investments, a family investment office in New Vernon, New Jersey.

When the messages seem good, to the extent they are believed, it helps the market. If something they say implies a more aggressive approach, the market sells off.

Escalating the conflict, Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi militia entered the war over the weekend.

All three of the major indexes started the day higher after logging sharp declines in the previous session. Since the war started, the Dow, the Nasdaq and the small-cap Russell 2000 have all confirmed correction territory, ending 10% lower from their record-high closes.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 116.06 points, or 0.26%, to 45,282.70, the S&P 500 lost 20.74 points, or 0.32%, to 6,348.11 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 149.69 points, or 0.71%, to 20,798.67.

Comments from Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell gave some support to stocks. Powell said longer-term inflation expectations appear to be holding despite the current energy shock and the Fed does not yet need to make a decision on how to react to the latest troubles. U.S. crude oil settled higher, while Brent eased.

Money market participants have priced out any easing from the Federal Reserve this year, compared with two cuts expected before the war began, per the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool.

The S&P 500 energy index was down slightly and technology stocks were also lower.

On the flip side, the financial index gained after the U.S. Department of Labor issued long-awaited guidelines intended to clarify how trustees can add alternative assets to 401(k) retirement plans.

Shares of asset managers climbed with Blackstone up 3.4% and KKR up 2.4%.

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 1.11-to-1 ratio on the NYSE. There were 143 new highs and 260 new lows on the NYSE.

On the Nasdaq, 2,088 stocks rose and 2,591 fell as declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.24-to-1 ratio. [click the intro to return to front page]


 CHATTER:

Recognisable Murrurundi art in the old Methodist Church over the weekend

Thai, our beloved chemist, is being farewell at the Bowlo tonight. The event starts at 6:00pm and goes on till 8:00 and probably later!!!! Participants are being invited to bring a plate and you don't have to be a member we are told.
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Meanwhile, the old Telegraph Café painting by Barry Bryan won the Art in the Landscape competition (above) displayed in the old Methodist Church hall during the weekend. People's favourite winner was Portia Jeffrey with a painting of the Gelato Shop.
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The Museum had a successful event also last night with a special invitation only party with drinks to introduce Jelle van den Berg' Man Mountain painting exhibition in God's Waiting Room hall alongside the museum. The exhibition will also be open next weekend.
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 NEWS:

🚛 Extra $30,000
a day to
stay in
business

A family-owned transport company has called on the Albanese government to wake up, saying the soaring cost of diesel will have a detrimental impact on this country David Wu writes on the news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

Runnymede Trucking, which transports freight locally in Victoria and interstate, revealed it had cost $3253.80 to fill up one of their trucks with diesel.

The driver had to fill up the truck’s two tanks four separate times due to the bowser being restricted to a maximum of $990.

Diesel cost $3.24 at the petrol station.

There will be transport operators closing daily, its Facebook post read.

One month ago this 1004 litres would have came in approximately $1707.

The company said the fuel will only last two days before the driver will need to top up again.

The post tagged PM Anthony Albanese, Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Energy Minister Chris Bowen.

Another trucking company, Ross Transport, described it as disgraceful there was no immediate relief offered to the sector.

Fuel prices have surged and for a mid-sized fleet of around 50 trucks, that’s an extra $30,000 PER DAY just to keep moving, it said on Facebook last Friday.

That’s roughly $600,000 a month in additional fuel costs … money that simply doesn't exist in an industry already running on razor-thin margins.

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🚙 The late
Albo cuts
fuel excise

Inflation will rumble along and the Reserve Bank has been given new headaches, economists warn, after the Albanese government capitulated to pressure for major new spending to deal with the Iran war oil crisis, agreeing to a $2.6bln fuel excise cut and the removal of road user charges. Matthew Cranston, Sarah Ison and Thomas Henry write on The Australian today's website.

Labor MPs were perplexed by Anthony Albanese’s decision to slash the fuel excise, saying they were surprised the government had moved ahead with a plan many of them were against and that the Prime Minister had no long-term fuel policy.

The government has argued that the spending is necessary to ward off a recession and avoid similar economic dysfunction to the Covid pandemic.

Economists were mostly dismissive of the excise cut, saying government handouts were not responsible. Rich Insight’s Chris Richardson declared the government was just allowing inflation to rumble along", creating further headaches for the Reserve Bank on interest rate hikes.

As economists raised the possible scenario of a recession, Mr Albanese on Monday insisted the economy must continue to function and that we don't want to find ourselves in a situation with what happened with Covid.

The Prime Minister encouraged people to get driving for the Easter holidays, announcing the uncosted fuel tax cut would begin from tomorrow (April 1). It is expected to reduce a forecast inflation spike to more than 5% by 0.5 percentage points.

This relief is temporary, it’s timely and it’s responsible, Jim Chalmers said, just three months after ending $6.8bln in electricity rebates that had artificially reduced headline inflation for more than two years.

It’s all about taking some of the edge off these high petrol prices which are putting such extraordinary pressure on household budgets right around the country.

The Treasurer also moved yesterday to extend provisions which allow for emergency spending when the parliament’s not sitting to rise to $3bln from $1bln, noting the provision is all about making sure that we have that fiscal firepower, Mr Chalmers said.

The cut is expected to reduce the cost of a 65-litre tank by about $19 and would come at a cost of $2.55bln, depending on the amount of demand in the system over that three-month period.

A six month cut to excise in 2022 was originally set to cost $3bln but the final hit was later estimated to be $5.6bln due to higher-than-expected fuel consumption. The original $3bln cut was projected by Treasury to reduce headline inflation by 0.25 percentage points.

Angus Taylor and opposition Treasury spokesman Tim Wilson lashed Mr Albanese and the Treasurer in question time on why they had not announced budget offsets to the $2.6bln cost of the fuel excise cut.

The Coalition declared cuts to green-energy and home-battery subsidies should be used as offsets.

Why is the Prime Minister always the last to lead in a national crisis? the Opposition Leader said.

On Monday, Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan welcomed the excise cut and denied it would further drive up demand and inflation. But federal Labor MPs pointed to the failure of a similar policy, implemented under the Morrison Coalition government, when petrol stations increased their prices in the weeks after the excise was cut. They warned that the measure would set a dangerous precedent.


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🎂 Wuthering
38 birthday
party

The daughter of tycoon John Symond has celebrated turning 38 with a party so opulent it featured a butter swan and monogrammed tiramisu according to Willow Berry in the Daily Telegraph newspaper today. [click to read more]

If there’s something Deborah Symond O'Neil knows how to do, it’s throw a party.

And as most other Aussies tighten belts and count fuel money, her gathering definitely did not.

While most people nearing 40 would hold off on a big birthday bash until that milestone, the Aussie Home Loans heiress ∼ daughter of property tycoon John Symond ∼ turned 38 with a Wuthering Heights movie fantasy that impressed.

Roses and lilies muscled into every corridor of her $21m super-mansion in Sydney’s east.

Front and centre was an oversized butter swan preening on silver.

Fruit arrangements doubled as tapestry and candles gave off a generous glow as guests wove through cascading balloons and opulent decor, while desserts sparkled like they had publicists, chief among them a cloud-light tiramisu branded with the birthday girl’s DSO initials in cocoa.

The Mode Sportif founder channelled her inner Margot Robbie as Cathy in the film in an off-white lace Alexander McQueen corseted dress, paired with lace Amina Muaddi pumps.

The guest list included an exclusive crowd of Sydney’s elite, with husband Ned O'Neil at her side, Michael Wipfli with wife Lisa, fashion identity Billy Mitchell and stylist Caroline Tran. 38 has never looked so good, Lisa Wipfli wrote on Instagram.

You sure know how to throw a 'touch of Wuthering Heights' party. Happy Birthday beautiful.

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📷 Best
photos of
the month

Today the Guardian has published its best photos of the month. Click on the link following to see them. Guardian website. [click to see the photos].

 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
At the risk of adding to conservatives' despair about the state of our country, here are the two key facts now shaping Australian politics: first, there’s a large One Nation vote that won't readily subside; and second, the bigger the One Nation vote, the likelier it is that even bad Labor governments will survive writes Peta Credlin, in The Australian today. [click to read more]

Exhibit A is last weekend’s South Australian election. For all the glee among hardliners at One Nation overtaking the Liberals and thereby punishing weakness, the result was not a more conservative government but a record Labor majority as the overall centre-right vote splintered and dissipated in preferences.

Maybe that matters little in a state with a competent, centrist, business-friendly government with a right-wing Labor Premier.

But what about in Victoria this coming November, where a big One Nation vote could yet save the worst Labor government in the country? And what about in Canberra in two years, when a big One Nation vote could give a third term to a government that has not only delivered a stagnant economy and a fractured society but that, quite possibly, due to its neglect of energy security, won't even have kept the traffic moving and the lights on?

Many admire Paulene

Many voters admire Pauline Hanson for her resilience and her consistency. As she has grown less angry and more assured and as her organisation has become more professional and less likely to endorse misfits, the message that she’s saying what you're thinking has become more compelling. Her once alarmist claim about the country being swamped by migrants now looks almost prescient.

The Scanlon Foundation Research Institute has been mapping social cohesion for almost two decades. In 2007, at the close of the Howard era, 77% of us told the institute’s pollster that we had a great sense of belonging to Australia. By the middle of last year, that had dropped to 46%.

Over the same period, the percentage taking great pride in the Australian way of life had dropped from 58% to just 34%. And 51% now think migration is too high, with far more Australians being negative than positive about migrants from the Middle East and about Muslims. So the concern that Hanson has been articulating, more or less continuously since 1996, that we risk becoming strangers in our own country is now much more widely reflected among voters.

No aspirations to be PM

Yet while she has tapped the national mood more effectively than either big party, she’s not aiming to replace either of them, saying the idea that she could be the PM or even the leader of the opposition is ridiculous.

While Hanson is plainly closer to the Coalition than to the ALP, One Nation failed to direct its preferences, despite the Liberals explicitly sending theirs her way. Which meant that despite obtaining over 40% of the first preference votes, the two right-of-centre parties will be lucky to get 20% of the South Australian seats.

Because most One Nation supporters are former Liberal voters, it’s the Coalition that they're most angry with; because on hot-button issues impacting social and economic wellbeing, like mass migration and net zero, for much of the past decade, the Libs have been Labor-lite. For some, it’s now less a protest vote against a party that has lost its way ∼ or even a bid to change a bad Labor government; because, they think, the so-called uni-party always wins ∼ than vindictiveness against the party they feel has most let them down.

Need for deeper convictions

The Liberals won't win jilted conservatives back just by changing policies on energy and immigration. That’s necessary but it’s not sufficient. More than just better, stronger policies in critical areas, the Liberals need deeper and stronger convictions. It has to be less a change of policy than a change of heart with the new policies built on conviction, not just calculation. If they can't manage that, the Liberals could turn out to be as doomed as the old United Australia Party was in 1943.

The Liberals under John Howard and Tony Abbott could win landslides because voters knew that they actually believed in policies that put Australia first. Whether they voted for them or not, the public saw in Howard and Abbott men of conviction and consistency. And whether you agree with Hanson or not, that is what One Nation supporters see in her. Under Howard and Abbott, One Nation was kept in check because in those days, there was no vacuum on the centre right.

Created first by Malcolm Turnbull, made worse by Scott Morrison, left open by Peter Dutton and not yet filled by Angus Taylor. An unholy combination of treachery, net-zero capitulation, cultural ambiguity and policy agnosticism. Even though it’s an iron law of politics that vacuums will eventually be filled — as One Nation has lately done very effectively.

Yet still, even when faced with last Saturday’s disaster, some Liberals continue to deny reality.

Still tilting left

Senior federal Liberal frontbencher Anne Ruston, a South Australian, declared the party needs to return to governing from the centre. Return? It was the very move to the centre ∼ a leftward move ∼ that has brought them down, opened up the opportunity for One Nation and left them facing oblivion.

Rather than sneer at One Nation, Liberals like Ruston need to appreciate that on issues of national unity and pride, One Nation was always far more right than wrong. And One Nation supporters need to appreciate that a strong Liberal-National Coalition remains the best hope of better government in this country.

Politics in this country is changing fast, and Liberals need the same relationship with One Nation that Labor has long had with the Greens because without disciplined preference flows Labor is the only winner.


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi

Helmuth von Moltke, the great Prussian strategist who crushed Austria in seven weeks and France in seven months, observed that no plan of operations survives first contact with the enemy’s main force Henry Ergas writes in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

Should the strikes on Iran end with nothing resolved, the conclusion deserves to be starker still: it is not only the plan that has failed but the doctrine behind it.

That doctrine ∼ limited war theory ∼ was born in the 1950s. Recoiling from the logic of Mutual Assured Destruction and from an American approach, forged in World War II, that coupled technological superiority with overwhelming firepower, the think tanks associated with the Pentagon proposed a more calculated alternative: restricted, proportionate force calibrated to political objectives.

Wars were reconceptualised as bargaining exercises.

Adversaries, subjected to graduated escalation, would read the signals, weigh the costs and, once continuing proved costlier than settling, come to the table. Armed force was just coercive diplomacy, each move a carefully pitched message leading to a negotiated outcome.

Vietnam exposed the doctrine

President John F. Kennedy embraced it, including as the answer to a Cold War increasingly waged in the jungles and shanty towns of the Third World.

But Vietnam exposed the doctrine’s fatal flaw. Having entered the war, Washington placed elaborate restraints on itself — geographic sanctuaries, target immunities, incremental deployments.

Meanwhile, Hanoi fought for total stakes: the unification of Vietnam, by any means, over any timeline. General Giap grasped exactly what American strategic restraint reflected: not scrupulous proportionality but limited will. Each restriction confirmed, in the Communists' reading, that the US lacked the stomach for a real fight.

The proof came with Operation Rolling Thunder, launched in 1965: a highly selective bombing campaign designed to send signals and bring Hanoi to the table. The message didn't get through. Rolling Thunder ground on for three years, inflicting damage without dinting the Communists' unrelenting focus on victory.

By '72 the war was lost

When the far deadlier Linebacker campaign of December 1972 finally targeted critical infrastructure, it did induce the North to negotiate — but by then it was far too late: the war was politically lost at home, the endgame already written.

As Robert Osgood, who advised presidents Nixon and Reagan, concluded, the US was in an inferior position in any contest of wills because its interests were less absolute, and its reliance on public support far greater, than Hanoi’s.

The Tet offensive of January 1968 had proved the point. A military rout for the Communists, it was a political catastrophe for the Johnson administration — all the more so as North Vietnam timed it to resonate in the primaries and the upcoming elections.

The president’s own advisers ∼ the Wise Men ∼ told him the war was unwinnable. If they had been so deeply influenced by Tet, Johnson noted, what must the average citizen be thinking? Giap sensed the change: Until Tet they thought they could win the war, now they knew they could not.

Can't remake in US image

From Vietnam, America drew two lessons. First, if you fight, fight to win. When we commit our troops to combat, we must do so with the sole object of winning, Reagan’s defence secretary, Caspar Weinberger, declared in 1984, articulating the Weinberger-Powell Doctrine of decisive force that marked a return to pre-Vietnam practice.

Second: don't try to remake foreign nations in America’s image. Entanglement in civil conflicts has a grim internal logic ∼ costs mount, resolve withers ∼ and Tolstoy’s two great warriors, Time and Patience, will outlast any occupier whose electorate tires of deaths and pain.

George W. Bush heeded the first lesson and ignored the second. Shock and awe ∼ the Weinberger-Powell Doctrine’s direct progeny ∼ was devastating on the battlefield. But as the second lesson had predicted, nation-building turned into a politically unsustainable fiasco.

Reeling from that outcome, Barack Obama abandoned the first lesson too. Nothing made that clearer than the absence of the word victory in his 2009 West Point address on strategy. Limited war theory returned under new branding ∼ strategic patience ∼ repeating the failed logic of its previous application: a decision in favour of indecision.

Joe Biden then applied that logic to Ukraine, barring Kyiv from striking Russian soil and rationing weapons in cautious ∼ sufficient but not escalatory ∼ tranches. That gifted the initiative to Vladimir Putin and turned the conflict into a blood-soaked quagmire.

The Ukraine conflict should have made one thing unmistakeable: graduated escalation is not a strategy; it is a way of avoiding one. But Iran is an even less promising context for the doctrine’s application. Where Hanoi and Moscow each pursued strategic ends, the Iranian regime frames the conflict in categorically different terms: not a contest to be managed but a Holy War, fuelled by an apocalyptic theology of redemptive martyrdom.

Half-measures will not work

Against such an adversary, half-measures are futile. Victory requires the decisive force Obama and Biden would not countenance: a sustained campaign aimed at crippling critical infrastructure, paralysing the regime’s capacity to function and obliterating its offensive capabilities.

Instead, after a strong start, Donald Trump drew a red line and then, seemingly seduced by the lure of the deal, deferred the reckoning.

The risk is of a return to the discredited doctrine of limited war, leaving Iran free to attack its neighbours, hold the world economy to ransom, and feign negotiation — or even worse, dictate a deal’s terms.

Wars, Machiavelli warned, begin where you will but do not end where you please. How this one will end remains clouded by an impenetrable fog in which all options are possible and none certain.

What is clear, however, is that the ramifications reach far beyond the conflict itself. Looking at the United States, it is hard not to recall Joseph Chamberlain’s despairing remark in 1902, as Britain emerged badly shaken from the Second Boer War. Victorious but financially, militarily and politically depleted, Britain was, said Chamberlain, a weary titan, staggering under the too vast orb of its fate.

No political will

The consequences were inexorable: Britain could no longer underwrite the Pax Britannica and the burden of guarding the global commons slowly passed to the United States. It is that inheritance which is being tested in the Strait of Hormuz.

The problem is that no alternative guarantor stands ready. European governments have neither the military means nor the political will. Accustomed to luxuriating in the benefits of a peace they have done nothing to secure or defend, they mutter fighting words only to immediately walk them back, petrified at the prospect of their own blood being shed. Nor can the gap be filled by the paper tiger of international law, which, unlike real law, is more often invoked against upholders of the rules than against their defiers.

That leaves the United States. But Americans are as divided as at any time since the Civil War, and less willing than ever to shoulder costs from which others make the greatest gain.

For Australia, which has long prospered in the shelter of a powerful ally, the oil price is likely to prove the least of the shocks to come. A country that has never had to assure its own lifelines may now face the harshest challenge of all: a world in which the threats can be trusted but the promises cannot.



 OVERSEAS:

Shaun Whitehouse, the owner of a hotel in Yeovil, is just one businessman grappling with kerosene prices that have more than doubled since the conflict began. “The rise in oil prices has added around £500 to our weekly bill,” Whitehouse says. With Labour’s tax raids leaving them with little fat left to trim, these business owners are praying for a warm spring. Meanwhile, Scott Mills has been sacked by the BBC over a historic relationship allegation after almost 30 years at the corporation. Elsewhere, Sir Keir Starmer has admitted the Government cannot tackle the fallout from the war in Iran "on its own", urging business leaders to help protect households from soaring prices reports The Telegraph editor Chris Evans. Latest headlines: ♦ Nato shoots down Iranian missile over Turkey. ♦ Australian fugitive shot dead by police after seven months on run. ♦ Russell Brand trial delayed over summer holiday juror shortage. ♦ Meningitis nightclub reopens with kissing warning. ♦ Russia expels British diplomat for 'spying'. ♦ Girl, 16, stabbed to death after 'row over boy'






The Murrurundi Times is owned, compiled and written by Des Dugan. Email