Latest National news
Neighbours hardly knew boy who turned killer
Saffron Howden 6:20 AM In the ordinary suburban Sydney street where Farhad Khalil Mohammad Jabar lived with his family, the 15-year-old boy hardly existed at all.
Phil Patton: Razzle-dazzler had inquisitive mind and eye for significance of design
William Grimes 7:15 PM Phil Patton was curious about everything, and could spin anything into a yarn.
Human trafficking of workers a growing problem in Victoria
Ben Schneiders and Royce Millar 12:15 AM Human trafficking of workers by unscrupulous, sometimes criminal, middlemen is a growing problem in Victoria.
Penalty rates exist for a reason: Leigh
Colin Brinsden 6:17 PM By Colin Brinsden, AAP Economics Correspondent
Telstra ACT Business Women's Awards nominee's success secrets
Clare Sibthorpe 12:15 AM Public service leader Felicity McNeill reflects on her Telstra ACT Business Women's Awards nomination.
Mother given referral three years after visiting ED
Henry Belot 12:15 AM Elizabeth Sisley went to Calvary Hospital in 2012 after having seizures and was told to see a neurologist.
Canberra national war cemetery plan scuttled
Tom McIlroy 12:15 AM The latest proposal for a national war cemetery has been scuttled by the demise of Tony Abbott's prime ministership.
A year on, deported Nauru detention centre staff demand an explanation
Adam Morton 11:57 AM Humanitarian workers deported from Nauru last year following unsubstantiated claims they encouraged asylum seekers to self-harm and fabricate stories of abuse are yet to receive an explanation – despite being promised one by the Australian government.
Liberals to release China FTA attack ads branding unions 'racist'
Heath Aston The Liberal Party is set to raise the temperature in the fight over the China Free Trade Agreement, with attack ads that accuse "ratbag unions" of stoking racism against the Chinese.
Industry to regulate underpaid 'black jobs'
Royce Millar and Ben Schneiders The Turnbull government has rejected the need for federal laws to clamp down on unscrupulous middlemen at the heart of a network of foreign worker scams, with new employment minister Michaelia Cash opting instead for industry self-regulation.
Child dies after drinking coconut milk as importer admits label charges
Tim Barlass A 10-year-old child died from an allergic reaction after drinking a "natural" coconut drink imported by a Sydney firm.
How football's grand game consumes a city
Mark Hawthorne The millions of dollars are in the detail at the AFL grand final.
Seselja says few Canberra jobs part of Gosford move
Matthew Raggatt Liberal senator says Canberra will be spared the major brunt of the move of 600 federal jobs to the Central Coast.
The new storytellers: Josh Robenstone
Ella Rubeli In Josh Robenstone's latest street photography series he delves behind the archetypal "postcard" images of Italy, using his sharp eye for colour and form to reveal a more multi-dimensional story of the streets.
Anti-abortion campaigner deported
Bianca Hall, Nicole Hasham Controversial American anti-abortion campaigner Troy Newman has been deported from Australia, authorities confirmed on Saturday.
Sports betting agencies investigated over advertising campaigns
Natalie O'Brien Bonus bets are under scrutiny again by the gambling watchdog.
'What chance in hell did he have of being alive?'
Michael Koziol Forces of nature had determined this occasion would be unblemished by even a single cloud. Paris bathed in sunshine, and not even the burly men with machine guns keeping watch over the 11th arrondissement's Town Hall could detract from the very literal triumph of love over hate.
Eastern suburbs to get redeveloped public primary school
Eryk Bagshaw Bellevue Hill to get new public primary school.
The private schools eating Sydney's suburbs
Eryk Bagshaw A group of Sydney's most expensive private schools will spend up to $200 million on new facilities as they seek to attract lucrative student dollars.
'Nearly impossible' to earn a decent wage
Ben Schneiders, Royce Millar Jessica Zaccaria, a visa worker, says it is "nearly impossible" to earn a decent wage working at a big supplier to Coles and Woolworths
Sex for training claims should be investigated: lawyer
Julia Medew Historical reports of sexual harassment and corruption in training overseen by the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons should be investigated with perpetrators held to account, a leading lawyer says.
Little girl lost: trying to identify the nameless victim of Wynarka's homicide
Ava Benny-Morrison It is an unusual position for homicide investigators to be in.
Lunch with James Wood: judge and buster of corruption
Rick Feneley James Roland Wood has been sitting at our table at the Hyde Park Barracks Cafe for barely three minutes when I conclude he is utterly bereft of bluster, bombast or pomposity. It's a pity, in some ways, because pompous people – for all their faults – tend to regale lunch companions with exuberant recollections of history and their critical place in it.
Eight Thiess John Holland executives to give evidence over Shorten Eastlink deal
Ben Schneiders, Royce Millar and James Massola Eight executives from Thiess John Holland have been called to give evidence to the Royal Commission into union corruption over a controversial mid 2000s deal between the builder and Bill Shorten
Dog and soldier: shared endeavour in a deadly line of work
Michael Bachelard 12:15 AM Man and dog gaze into each others eyes, the electric space between them fizzing with currents of devotion, trust and shared endeavour.
Immigration move out of Belconnen appears quashed
Phillip Thomson The tender to build department's new headquarters has been killed.
Climate targets: India commits before Paris but world falling short
Tom Arup, Environment Editor The last big countries to reveal their greenhouse gas emissions targets ahead of global talks in Paris have informed the United Nations of their intentions, however the collective commitments still sees the world falling short of the action needed to halt global warming at relatively safe levels.
'I felt like a teenager again'
Richard Woolveridge A new Dallas-style buyers club to help thousands of hepatitis C sufferers get life-saving drugs at a fraction of the cost being charged by a pharmaceutical giant has been inundated with inquiries in its first week.