Home EsporteAustralia news live: cries of ‘shame’ as Coalition opposes apology to First Peoples in Victorian parliament; Telstra did not tell minister of triple-zero death | Australia news

Australia news live: cries of ‘shame’ as Coalition opposes apology to First Peoples in Victorian parliament; Telstra did not tell minister of triple-zero death | Australia news

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Benita Kolovos

Benita Kolovos

Apology motion passes Victoria’s lower house

The apology motion has passed Victoria’s lower house 56 votes to 27.

The Coalition called for a division on the motion, meaning each vote had to be counted, to cries of “shame” from the Labor benches.

Once the motion was carried, Labor and Greens MP stood to applaud the public gallery, which included Rueben Berg and Ngarra Murray, the co-chairs of the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria, Jill Gallagher and Travis Lovett.

Several members of the public gallery wiped away tears.

Victorian premier Jacinta Allan and other MPs react after the bill is passed
Victorian premier Jacinta Allan and other MPs react after the bill is passed. Photograph: Con Chronis/AAP

Key events

Ex-nurse denies threatening to hurt Israeli patients

A former nurse will be tried for allegedly threatening violence towards Israeli patients after a video of an inflammatory rant from a hospital went viral, AAP reports.

Sarah Abu Lebdeh, 27, and Ahmad Rashad Nadir, 28, made the alleged threats on an online video chat platform in February, while they were working a night shift at southwest Sydney’s Bankstown-Lidcombe Hospital.

Abu Lebdeh faced a local court on Tuesday to plead not guilty to two charges including threatening violence, setting the scene for a trial, likely in late 2026 or early 2027. The former nurse will face the NSW District Court in February to be arraigned before a trial date is set.

Her former colleague Nadir also faced the Downing Centre Local Court on Tuesday on a single charge of using a carriage service to menace, harass or offend. He is yet to enter a plea.

Police have said there is no evidence any patient was harmed and that the alleged offending would rest on the nurses’ intention. Both Nadir and Abu Lebdeh have been prohibited from working as nurses nationwide by Australia’s health practitioner watchdog and their registrations have been suspended in NSW.

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