Australia politics live: Vanuatu PM in Canberra as hopes rise over treaty; fossil fuel companies accused of marketing to children | Australia news

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Australia politics live:


Vanuatu PM in Canberra for talks with Albanese as hopes rise over treaty

Vanuatu’s prime minister, Jotham Napat, will meet with Anthony Albanese today in Canberra for talks, after months of negotiations on the Nakamal agreement.

The two countries have gone back and forth on the treaty, which is yet to be inked, but today’s visit could be a good sign of progress.

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Late last year, the government failed to get Vanuatu over the line on the $500m agreement, amid concerns from Vanuatu that it would block other countries providing infrastructure funding.

The leaders will sit down for a meeting before addressing the media later today – so we’ll bring all that as it comes.

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Social media ban ‘flexible and adaptable’ says Wells

Anika Wells denies the announcement the government would toughen penalties for breaches of the social media ban, and give the eSafety commissioner more powers, is an admission the ban is failing.

The government says it will introduce legislation to double the fines to $99m – in line with other corporate penalties – and give the eSafety commissioner stronger information-gathering powers.

Research released this month has found more than 80% of children with social media accounts said they were still on the platforms, more than three months after the ban came into force.

Speaking to ABC RN Breakfast, Wells says it’ll take time for the numbers to go down and the culture to change.

double quotation markWe’ve consistently said that our social media minimum age law is a world first. It’s going to need to be flexible and adaptable.

I think we can all agree we would like the scheme to work better than it is currently, but that is on big tech taking the mickey.

There are two pieces to this. There are the actual enforcement mechanisms that we need to do now … But then there’s also the broader cultural change piece. And much like when seatbelts became mandatory in cars, it took a while for people to observe that law. And this is about the five-year-olds, the nine-year-olds who will never have a social media account until 16. That change will take a while to seep through.

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