- Asian markets mixed as traders eye Trump 2.0
- Indonesia launches ambitious free-meal programme to combat stunting
- Most Asian markets cautiously higher as traders eye Trump 2.0
- 'Emilia Perez,' Demi Moore among winners at Golden Globes
- Franco dictatorship splits Spain 50 years after death
- French marine park closes over law banning killer whale shows
- Central US pummeled by snow, ice as major storm heads east
- Liverpool-Man Utd Premier League clash to go ahead despite snowfall
- Bezos's Blue Origin poised for first orbital launch next week
- Hollywood A-listers set to shine at Golden Globes
- Messi misses Presidential Medal ceremony with Biden
- Bono, Messi, Soros awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom by Biden
- World's oldest person dies at 116 in Japan
- Syria says international flights to and from Damascus to resume Tuesday
- Bono, Messi, Soros get Presidential Medal of Freedom from Biden
- South Korea says fatal crash cockpit transcript nearly complete
- EV sales hit record in UK but still behind target
- AI expected to star at CES gadget extravaganza
- Brazil says 2024 was its hottest year on record
- Soldier in Vegas Tesla blast suffered PTSD, no 'terror' link: FBI
- Microsoft expects to spend $80 bn on AI this fiscal year
- Man arrested for supplying drugs to Liam Payne: Argentine police
- Breeding success: London zoo counts its animals one-by-one
- Biden blocks US Steel sale to Japan's Nippon Steel
- Wall Street stocks bounce higher, Europe retreats
- Neil Young says he will play Glastonbury after all
- Biden blocks US-Japan steel deal
- British novelist David Lodge dies aged 89
- Indonesia says 2024 was hottest year on record
- Indian duo self-immolate in Bhopal waste protest
- Indian food delivery app rolls out ambulance service
- European stock markets retreat after positive start to year
- UK electricity cleanest on record in 2024: study
- Biden to block US-Japan steel deal: US media
- Thai PM declares millions in watches and bags among $400 mn assets
- China says 'determined' to open up to world in 2025
- Asian shares rise defying slow Wall Street start to 2025
- 'Emilia Perez' heads into Golden Globes as strong favorite
- 'You need to be happy': graffiti encourages Cuban self-reflection
- Disaster-hit Chilean park sows seeds of fire resistance
- Mixed day for global stocks as dollar pushes higher
- Nick Clegg leaves Meta global policy team
- Tesla reports lower 2024 auto deliveries, missing forecast
- Meghan Markle's lifestyle show to premiere Jan 15 on Netflix
- Wall Street lifts spirits after Asia starts year in red
- UK's biggest dinosaur footprint site uncovered
- Most UK doctors suffer from 'compassion fatigue': poll
- Secret lab developing UK's first quantum clock: defence ministry
- US mulls new restrictions on Chinese drones
- Wall Street dons early green after Asia starts year in red
Australia PM apologises for abuse, bullying in parliament
Australia's prime minister apologised for widespread sexual harassment, abuse and bullying of political staff Tuesday, a year after a high-profile rape allegation rocked the country's parliament.
Addressing lawmakers, Scott Morrison apologised directly to former staffer Brittany Higgins who said she was raped by a male colleague in a minister's office in 2019.
"I'm sorry to Ms Higgins for the terrible things that took place here," Morrison said describing a decades-long culture of abuse in the corridors of power.
"But I am sorry for far more than that -- for all of those who came before Ms Higgins and endured the same."
"Over many decades, an ecosystem, a culture, was perpetuated where bullying, abuse, harassment, and in some cases even violence, became normalised," he said.
Higgins went public in January last year, sparking nationwide protests.
Australians were shocked by the alleged abuse she experienced, but also the way she was treated when she told her bosses.
She said she felt pressured not to go to the police ahead of the 2019 election and described a "culture of silence" in Australian political parties.
In the wake of Higgins' allegations, and those of other staffers who came forward after her, the government launched multiple inquiries.
One of those, the 450-page Jenkins Review, found that one-in-three people currently working in Commonwealth workplaces have experienced sexual harassment while working there.
In his speech, Morrison said: "This has to change. It is changing. And I believe it will change."
Opposition leader Anthony Albanese also offered an apology to Higgins from his Labor party.
"You have torn through a silence that has acted as the life support system for the most odious of status quos," he said.
Listening from the public gallery, Higgins became visibly emotional during the speeches.
She sat between three fellow former staffers who have gone public with their own allegations, and two women's rights advocates.
The women were asked to attend the formal acknowledgement after they tweeted the night before about not being invited.
Higgins will speak Wednesday at the National Press Club alongside sexual abuse survivor Grace Tame, who was the 2021 Australian of the Year.
Tame dismissed the prime minister’s apology. "How about some proactive, preventative measures and not just these performative, last-minute bandaid electioneering stunts?” she tweeted Tuesday.
X.Wong--CPN