Federal Politics

Pyne says census attack came from Australia

"Obviously it was disrupted on Tuesday night by elements here in Australia": Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne.

Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne has contradicted previous government claims the census was attacked from overseas, stating the interference came from "elements here in Australia".

Census cyber attacks likely from low-level hacktivists

The ABS announced the census was back online at 2.30pm although users continued to report issues accessing the site.

The cyber attacks that sparked a deliberate shutdown of the Census website on Tuesday night appear to have been small-scale and likely carried out by ordinary "hacktivists" rather than sophisticated organisations or governments, experts and insiders say.

Census back online nearly 48 hours after outage

Most Australians are yet to complete the census

Millions of Australians can now complete their census after the ABS finally brought the survey back online on Thursday afternoon, nearly 48 hours after the survey went online on Tuesday evening.

China's fighter-plane hangars worry ex-Abbott adviser

Land reclamation of Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea.

Chinese fighter plane hangars revealed in disturbing new satellite images of the South China Sea would allow Beijing to rapidly shift military hardware onto artificial islands to control the key waterways, Australia's former national security adviser says.

Nauru guard admits throwing rocks at children

Mohammad Mahdi Eskandarikhah was injured on Nauru after a guard threw a rock at him.

A Nauru detention centre guard hurled rocks at a group of young children which allegedly struck a young Iranian boy in the face, cutting his lip and chipping teeth, official documents show.

Denton slams conservative MPs' opposition to euthanasia laws

Andrew Denton

Television personality Andrew Denton has criticised Catholic MPs Kevin Andrews and Tony Burke for their role in scuttling voluntary euthanasia laws in Australia, decrying "subterranean forces" for preventing reforms to help the sick and dying.

Indigenous referendum delay welcomed as opportunity to get it right

The Referendum Council is in the process of consulting with Indigenous communities around the country.

Newly extended consultations on the referendum to recognise Indigenous people in the constitution - delays that render a 2017 vote unlikely - have been embraced by the National Congress of Australia's First Peoples as acknowledgement that a "historical opportunity" should be approached in the right way and not rushed.

Indigenous recognition referendum unlikely for 2017

Indigenous recognition referendum council co-chair Mark Leibler.

Moves to coincide a referendum on Indigenous recognition in the Australian constitution with the 50th anniversary of the landmark 1967 vote on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander rights have been abandoned, as a consultation report is delayed until mid-2017.