Good morning, this is Eleanor Ainge Roy bringing you the main stories and must-reads on Monday 16 April. Top stories Western powers are switching to back to diplomacy after the weekend's military strikes against chemical weapons sites in Syria, calling for the UN to launch a broad investigation into the Syrian government's chemical weapons stockpiles. A draft resolution will call on the whole of the UN to try to reinvigorate the stalled peace talks, accept a ceasefire and restore humanitarian access to besieged areas. Many of the UN security council's 15 members, who meet on Monday, will urge Russia to stop protecting Bashar al-Assad's regime from a UN inquiry. Overnight the US envoy to the UN, Nikki Haley, made a surprise about-turn by revealing that US troops would stay in Syria until their mission was complete. Haley told Fox News the troops would stay until Islamic State was defeated and Syria's chemical weapons stockpile could not be used to harm US interests. "We are not going to leave until we have accomplished those things," she said. Hundreds of firefighters and residents in south-western Sydney suburbs were waiting on Monday morning to discover the extent of damage from the weekend bushfire that has so far burnt through 2,500 hectares. The blaze was downgraded from emergency level to watch and act about 5.30pm on Sunday as conditions began to ease, and authorities expected lower temperatures and easing winds to help their efforts to control the fire on Monday. The fire, which began on Saturday afternoon and may have been deliberately lit, was fanned by strong winds on Sunday, and the Rural Fire Service said some properties had not escaped unscathed. Bill Shorten has demanded that charities' advocacy work be exempt from the proposed foreign donation ban, clarifying Labor's demands after a bipartisan report suggested the law be rewritten. The comments set Labor on a collision course with the government, which has offered to consider recommendations to amend the bill but refused to completely exempt charities from the ban. In a unanimous report released on Monday, the joint standing committee on electoral matters recommended the electoral funding and disclosure bill should define political expenditure as spending "to influence voters to take specific action as voters, so as not to capture non-political issue advocacy". That would apply the foreign donation ban to charities in theory, but in practice allow them to continue to take international money. A tissue-destroying ulcer once rare in Australia is at epidemic proportions in regions of Victoria, prompting infectious diseases experts to call for urgent research into how it is spread. Writing in the Medical Journal of Australia, researchers said incidents of Buruli ulcer were on the rise but they were baffled as to why Victoria was particularly affected. There have been no reported cases in NSW, South Australia or Tasmania. The disease is most often associated with swampland areas in tropical countries. Prof Paul Johnson, a Buruli ulcer expert, believes it is most likely the bacteria that causes the ulcer, Mycobacterium ulcerans, is being spread by mosquitos and possums. Voters are divided on whether Malcolm Turnbull's government should intervene to stop coal power stations closing or subsidise the construction of new ones, but strongly back energy efficiency measures, a new poll has found. The YouGov Galaxy poll, released on Monday, found that 42% wanted the government to intervene to keep existing coal electricity generators open, compared with 33% who opposed it. It found 41% in favour of subsidies for new coal plants or for the government to build them itself, with 37% against. The poll of 1,000 respondents found that 90% thought it is important or very important for the government to help reduce households' and businesses' energy bills. Sport Australia hit 80 gold medals despite late upsets in netball and rugby sevens as the Commonwealth Games concluded on Sunday night, with marathon, squash and basketball golds adding to final tally. But organisers came in for heavy criticism for not providing timely medical assistance to the Scottish runner Callum Hawkins after he collapsed from heat exhaustion while leading the marathon. Daniel Ricciardo has won his first grand prix of the season in China, carving up the field after a collision with his Red Bull team-mate Max Verstappen brought out the safety car. "This sport's crazy," Ricciardo said. "A week ago I was with my head down. Frustrated at the sport, frustrated at all the variables." Thinking time |
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