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Christmas Test a window to the world as Australia reels in wake of Bondi atrocity | Barney Ronay

about 8 hours ago
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The third Ashes Test in Adelaide will not be the first to take place in the shadow of modern-day acts of terror.The 2005 series in England began two weeks after the 7 July London bombings, which killed 52 people.Day one at Lord’s coincided with an aborted follow-up atrocity that failed only because of the incompetence of those involved.Twenty years on, after the murder of at least 15 people at Bondi beach on Sunday during a Hanukah celebration, the most heinous act of terror on Australian soil, the Australian government has bolstered its security operation for Adelaide.There are practical consequences.

Entry to the ground will take longer than usual.The recently formed armed Security Response Section will patrol the Oval’s beautifully green-tinged surrounds.The match was likely, at time of writing, to begin with a “moment of reflection” led by the premier of South Australia, Peter Malinauskas.In the days since Sunday Australia has felt, even in its round‑the‑clock live reporting of leads and details, like a place in a state of slow-motion shock.There were initially some suggestions the Christmas Test might be cancelled or postponed.

But as the state police commissioner, Grant Stevens, said on the eve of the match, Sydney is being seen as a distinct event,“We don’t have any information whatsoever that indicates there’s a linkage between what happened in Bondi on the weekend and South Australia,”No linkage, in policing terms,But there always is linkage,In Adelaide the main centre of public mourning has been the Adelaide Holocaust Museum and Andrew Steiner Education Centre, a mile across the city grid from the cricket ground.

Malinauskas laid flowers there on Monday,The opposition leader, Ashton Hurn, then did the same,Malinauskas followed up by promising the centre half a million dollars in funding,Not that there was much sign of this the day before the Test,The centre is a detached building on Wakefield Street, a midtown triple carriageway lined with startlingly beautiful purple‑plumed jacaranda trees.

By Tuesday morning it had returned to a state of dormant anonymity, barring a small selection of flowers left at the entrance,The topic of morning mass inside the modern gothic Catholic cathedral next door was the commercialisation of Christmas,The only real tell as to the significance of this place were the blocks in its front wall, which showed signs of having been scoured and scrubbed a great deal of late, legacy of multiple antisemitic defacings in the years since the Hamas kidnappings of 7 October 2023 and Israel’s military response,Not long ago CCTV caught some local neo-Nazi groups performing fascist salutes outside,In this context the police verdict that Bondi is unlinked to any wider threat might raise a weary sigh.

Some of Adelaide’s earliest settlers were Jewish sheep farmers, but the Jewish population now is small, close to a thousand.Despite this, reports of antisemitism are common.The city’s synagogues have security guards on service days and suffer regular graffiti attacks.Adelaide University has been wrestling with the need to foster free political speech against reports of overt hostility towards Jewish students.These tensions might be at odds with the tourist-poster view of a hail‑fellow nation of immigrants.

But Australia has a longstanding problem with racism.It has a problem, more specifically, with antisemitism, incidents of which have tripled in the past two years according to a report by the Executive Council of Australian Jewry.The details in its appendix now carry a disturbing sense of narrative arc.In November 2024 there was an arson attack on a kosher catering business in Bondi.In December 2024 the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne was burned to the ground.

In January this year cars in Sydney were set alight and daubed with anti‑Jewish hate slogans.From the outside Australia seems to provide a very vivid case study in the way violence in Gaza and Israel has echoed around the world.Its Jewish population has the highest percentage of holocaust survivors outside Israel, something Michael Visontay, commissioning editor of the Jewish Independent, described this week as “central to its identity”.As Visontay told the New Yorker: “The sensitivity within the community to the threats of antisemitism, of prejudice … are much more pronounced here than they are virtually anywhere else.”At the same time Australia also has a significant youthful Muslim community, which has voiced its own concerns over the actions of the Israel Defense Forces in Gaza.

It is a familiar dynamic, a mess of bloodshed and irresolvable tensions, one that found its most murderously deranged expression in the horror of last weekend.And at Bondi of all places.As Rabbi Yossi Engel of Adelaide’s Chabad SA synagogue told local news outlets on Tuesday: “Bondi beach is a symbol of open Australia.In terms of a spot in Australia that’s symbolic of the fair dinkum way of Australia, Bondi beach is about as plain good old Aussie as it gets.”As is the cricket, Australia’s summer pastime, and a Test match that will take place now against that same sense of horror.

Even the announcement on Tuesday of Australia’s team was the spur for a trending tide of social media abuse directed towards Usman Khawaja, on the grounds Khawaja has expressed previously his concern for the suffering of Palestinian people in Gaza.Sport must now march into this world once again, staging its own pantomime tensions, holding up its cameras, a window to the world beyond.A common reaction on Australian television this week is that the country feels irrevocably changed by the massacre on Sunday.It will be felt again in Adelaide, memorialised in Sydney when England travel east for the New Year Test; and preserved now in perpetuity by the images, the sounds, the highlights reel of this Ashes tour.
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Unemployment rises in US and UK, adding to pressure to cut interest rates – as it happened

Time to wrap up…. on a day in which unemployment has risen on both sides of the Atlantic….The US labor market grew by more than expected last month, recovering some of the damage inflicted by the federal government shutdown, according to official data.An estimated 105,000 jobs were lost in October, and 64,000 were added in November, a highly-anticipated report showed on Tuesday.Jobs growth was higher in November than anticipated by many economists, with a consensus forecast of some 40,000 jobs added

about 14 hours ago
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US lost 105,000 jobs in October and added 64,000 in November, according to delayed data

The US labor market grew by more than expected last month, recovering some of the damage inflicted by the federal government shutdown, according to official data.An estimated 105,000 jobs were lost in October, and 64,000 were added in November, a highly-anticipated report showed on Tuesday.Jobs growth was higher in November than anticipated by many economists, with a consensus forecast of some 40,000 jobs added.But the headline unemployment rate continued to climb – and hit 4.6%, a four-year high, last month – amid apprehension around the strength of the US economy

about 15 hours ago
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Water levels across the Great Lakes are falling – just as US data centers move in

The sign outside Tom Hermes’s farmyard in Perkins Township in Ohio, a short drive south of the shores of Lake Erie, proudly claims that his family have farmed the land here since 1900. Today, he raises 130 head of cattle and grows corn, wheat, grass and soybeans on 1,200 acres of land.For his family, his animals and wider business, water is life.So when, in May 2024, the Texas-based Aligned Data Centers broke ground on its NEO-01, four-building, 200,000 sq ft data center on a brownfield site that abuts farmland that Hermes rents, he was concerned.“We have city water here

about 16 hours ago
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Boost for artists in AI copyright battle as only 3% back UK active opt-out plan

A campaign fronted by popstars including Elton John and Dua Lipa to protect artists’ works from being mined to train AI models without consent has received a boost after almost every respondent to a government consultation backed their case.Ninety-five per cent of the more than 10,000 people who had their say over how music, novels, films and other works should be protected from copyright infringements by tech companies called for copyright to be strengthened and a requirement for licensing in all cases or no change to copyright law.By contrast, only 3% of people backed the government’s initial preferred tech company-friendly option, which was to require artists and copyright holders to actively opt out of having their material fed into data-hungry AI systems.Ministers subsequently dropped that preference in the face of a backlash. Artists who have opposed any dilution of their copyright include Sam Fender, Kate Bush and the Pet Shop Boys

1 day ago
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Christmas Test a window to the world as Australia reels in wake of Bondi atrocity | Barney Ronay

The third Ashes Test in Adelaide will not be the first to take place in the shadow of modern-day acts of terror. The 2005 series in England began two weeks after the 7 July London bombings, which killed 52 people. Day one at Lord’s coincided with an aborted follow-up atrocity that failed only because of the incompetence of those involved. Twenty years on, after the murder of at least 15 people at Bondi beach on Sunday during a Hanukah celebration, the most heinous act of terror on Australian soil, the Australian government has bolstered its security operation for Adelaide.There are practical consequences

about 8 hours ago
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Harlequins coach refuses to rule out move for Northampton back George Furbank

The Harlequins senior coach, Jason Gilmore, has praised the ability of Northampton’s George Furbank and declined to rule out a move for the England back.The 29-year-old Saints star is out of contract next summer and has reportedly held talks with the south‑west London club over a switch from the 2023-24 Premiership winners.Gilmore, who is preparing the Harlequins squad for Big Game 17 against Bristol Bears at Twickenham on Saturday, said he is an admirer of the England international but he refused to comment on specific “ins and outs”.“George is a good player, isn’t he? And a good leader,” Gilmore said, when asked about transfer speculation surrounding the full‑back, who made his international debut under Eddie Jones in 2020.“He’s going to attract interest

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