Spain’s deadly floods and droughts are two faces of the climate crisis coin

Scientists say violent weather battering Mediterranean is a harbinger of what the rest of Europe can soon expect

Residents of Chiva, a small town on the outskirts of Valencia, can expect a grim future of worsening drought as the planet heats up and the country dries out. But on Tuesday, they also witnessed a year’s worth of rainfall in a matter of hours.

The torrential rains that flooded southern and eastern Spain on Tuesday night, ripping away bridges and tearing through towns, have killed scores of people. Fossil fuel pollution plays a role in warping both extremes of the water cycle: heat evaporates water, leaving people and plants parched, but hot air can hold more moisture, increasing the potential for catastrophic downpours.

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Taliban bans women ‘hearing other women’s voices’ in latest decree – Fox News

  1. Taliban bans women 'hearing other women's voices' in latest decree  Fox News
  2. Taliban Ban Afghan Women 'From Hearing Each Other': Report  NDTV
  3. Taliban bans women from ‘hearing other women’s voices’  The Telegraph
  4. Taliban forbids women from 'hearing each others voices'  The Jerusalem Post
  5. Afghan women ‘banned from hearing each other’s voice’ in new Taliban rule  The Indian Express
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US issues hundreds of Russia-related sanctions, Treasury Dept website shows – Reuters

  1. US issues hundreds of Russia-related sanctions, Treasury Dept website shows  Reuters
  2. IAF strikes Hezbollah fuel depots in Lebanon  The Jerusalem Post
  3. IDF says deputy head of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force has been killed  The Times of Israel
  4. Israel Eliminates Deputy Commander of Hezbollah’s Radwan Force  Foundation for Defense of Democracies
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‘Wicked problem’: five charts that show how the climate crisis is making Australia more dangerous

A report by BoM and CSIRO checks ‘vital signs of Australia’s climate’ – and shows temperature trends will only worsen

“It is a wicked problem,” says Dr Karl Braganza at the Bureau of Meteorology, after running through Australia’s latest State of the Climate report.

The effects of rising heat on land and in the oceans, coupled with rising greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, are changing Australia’s climate rapidly and “flowing through to how our society, economy and other things operate”.

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‘Bias’ finding over robodebt investigation undermines faith in anti-corruption watchdog, legal expert says

Review into integrity body especially concerning as it relates to ‘the person at the top’, Geoffrey Watson SC says

The federal anti-corruption watchdog’s conflict of interest is “really concerning” because it relates to “the person at the top”, Geoffrey Watson SC, a former counsel assisting to the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption, has said.

On Wednesday, the inspector of the National Anti-Corruption Commission released a excoriating review of the Nacc’s decision not to investigate robodebt corruption referrals, finding it to be “affected by apprehended bias”.

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Four Davids and two Nigels: can Crisafulli deliver a modern and inclusive cabinet? | Ben Smee

As Queensland’s new premier prepares to announce his frontbench, he may struggle to incorporate women and multicultural MPs into the LNP lineup

David Crisafulli will be breaking a promise either way. He said he’d keep his old opposition frontbench in place after the election. He also promised to lead a forward-thinking, modern-looking government.

It’s unlikely he can do both.

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Remote Indigenous Australians paying more than double capital city prices for everyday groceries

Choice finds basket of nine items cost $99.38 on average at four remote community stores in Western Australia and the Northern Territory

People living in remote Indigenous communities are paying more than double the capital city prices for everyday groceries including flour, tasty cheese, apples and milk, new research has found.

A basket of nine items, which also included penne pasta, beef mince, teabags, carrots and Weet-Bix cost $99.38 on average at four remote community stores in Western Australia and the Northern Territory, the research by Choice found.

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Teen accused of UK Southport murders faces new ‘terrorism’ charge – Al Jazeera English

  1. Teen accused of UK Southport murders faces new ‘terrorism’ charge  Al Jazeera English
  2. Teen accused of deadly UK stabbing at Taylor Swift-themed event now faces terror charge: Police  ABC News
  3. UK stabbing suspect in deaths of 3 girls found with ricin, al Qaeda material and charged under Terrorism Act  Fox News
  4. Teen charged in UK dance class stabbings stays silent in court on new poison and terror charges  The Associated Press
  5. Teen suspected of UK stabbing gets new charges after al-Qaeda manual, poison found in home  USA TODAY
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Irish school abuse inquiry should cover ‘leathering’, survivors say

Former pupils of Catholic schools say corporal punishment was ‘hourly occurence’ in 60s and 70s

The Irish government has been urged to extend the scope of a statutory inquiry into historical child abuse in schools to include corporal punishment, including a practice known as “leathering”.

Survivors of physical assault in Catholic schools have complained they were told there was no scope to include corporal punishment in an investigation into sexual abuse, announced in September.

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