Episoder
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On today's show: As the UN slaps more bans on Pyongyang, we take you to the North Korean border to find out just how tight sanctions are; Children are drowning at alarming rates in pools and waterways, what are we doing wrong? And can a monkey win a copyright battle?
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On today's program: The whipping winds and torrential rain of Hurricane Irma are delivering devastation in Florida, with millions of people forced from their homes in one of the largest evacuations in American history; and a new survey by UBS suggests that a growing number of Australian borrowers are also bending the truth when filling out loan applications
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Mangler du episoder?
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On today's program: A cyberattack leaves the company Equifax reeling, with fears private details of its 143 million customers could be exposed online; And people in the Bahamas batten down for super storm Irma.
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On today's show: The High Court finds the same-sex marriage survey lawful; The NT Children's Commissioner expresses concern over police naming kids on social media; And the Caribbean Islands feel the force of Hurricane Irma.
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On today's show: The Federal Opposition continues to target the Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce, calling on him to stand aside from Cabinet, until doubts about his constitutional qualifications have been resolved; And concerns that just one in ten kids in some remote Indigenous communities meet the minimum standards for reading or writing.
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On today's show: The legal battle against the same-sex marriage postal survey reaches the High Court; The US asks China and other members of the UN Security Council to cut off all oil and other fuel to North Korea; And the head of Anglican Church in Australia announces new rules to prevent child sexual abuse.
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On Today's program: The United States has warned of a massive military response to the latest North Korean nuclear test, and a new study suggests that 27 per cent of Australians are not confident they could spot signs that a child is being abused.
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On Friday's program: A flu outbreak at a nursing home in Victoria kills seven people and triggers a call to review the nation's vaccination policy; If you shivered through winter then you may be surprised to hear it's been the hottest on record; And new data suggests Australians are drinking more.
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On today's show: The citizenship saga continues to unfold, with Senator Derryn Hinch the latest to ask to be referred to the high court on account of an American social security number; Monsoon rain wreaks chaos across the subcontinent; And the dangers of beauty salons offering cosmetic injections.
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On today's program, more than 1,200 people have died and 16 million people have been affected by monsoon floods across South Asia, and Australia's first nationally televised advertisement against same-sex marriage has attracted widespread criticism.
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On today's show: Thousands continue to wait for rescue teams amid the catastrophic flooding in Houston; Tensions on the Korean peninsula after Pyongyang fires missile over Japan; And why are kids not riding bikes as much as they used to?
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Monday: Labor joins groups pledging to support asylum seekers cut off from welfare; Houston braces for more rain; and Syrian children tell of the horror of living under ISIS.
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On Friday's program: Sacred relics of history or painful reminders of past wrongs? Stan Grant joins PM in the debate over statues and other monuments our cities; Calls for a cull of koalas on Kangaroo Island; And concerns that relationship counsellors could be doing more harm than good.
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On PM: The damning assessment of the Australian Olympic Committee; One of the key backers of the Federal Government's cashless welfare card withdraws his support; And conservationists discover significant numbers of the critically endangered Regent Honeyeater.
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PM covers a broad spectrum of issues relevant to all sections of Australia's diverse community.
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On PM: Donald Trump on Afghanistan; The Royal Commission into child sexual abuse condemns the Australian Defence Force for failures it says perpetuated a culture of abuse; And tech giants cop a grilling from a Senate committee over tax avoidance.
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On Friday's program: Sacred relics of history or painful reminders of past wrongs? Stan Grant joins PM in the debate over statues and other monuments our cities; Calls for a cull of koalas on Kangaroo Island; And concerns that relationship counsellors could be doing more harm than good.
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On PM: A seven-year-old Australian boy missing in Barcelona after being separated from his mother during the terrorist attack; UN being urged to "name and shame" Saudi for suspected war crimes; And new research on humpback whales.
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On PM: 'An appalling and offensive stunt' - the major parties condemn Pauline Hanson for wearing a burqa in the Senate chamber; Telstra shares punished by investors after the telco slashes dividends; And can kids teach themselves how to spot and avoid 'fake news'?
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On PM, the Prime Minster shifts focus to Australia Day, some certainty around the death of terrorist Khaled Sharrouf, and wage growth 'stuck' at a record low.
- Se mer