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Australia news live: RSL to review welcome to country policy; Angus Taylor vows to double fuel reserve | Australia news

Australia news live: RSL to review welcome to country policy; Angus Taylor vows to double fuel reserve | Australia news

RSL Australia will review welcome to country policies

Krishani Dhanji

The RSL has announced it will review its guidance on welcome to country addresses at Anzac Day services after Indigenous leaders were booed at three dawn services on Saturday.

The RSL national president, Peter Tinley told the ABC on Monday that the body would review its policies on RSL organised commemorations and “provide guidance to our branches as to how they might attend to this”.

Tinley said he was appalled by the booing during the dawn ceremonies but added that some of the “anodyne acknowledgments” can get “overworked”.

double quotation markIt can get overworked … so then it becomes a question of how are we going to review this process and make it more relevant.

I think there’s a real opportunity for the RSL to lead and provide a better expression that is more tailored and appropriate for the commemorative day that it is.

Tinley said it was a “good thing” for the guidelines and service to be dynamic and reflective of the community.

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Key events

John Howard reflects on Port Arthur

Former prime minister John Howard is speaking on RN Breakfast this morning about Port Arthur, describing the response and the country’s landmark gun buyback program in the aftermath of the massacre.

He said:

double quotation markIt rocked the country. There’s no other way of describing it. …

I’d just been elected to a prime minister after a long period in opposition with a huge majority, and I developed a view pretty quickly that I had to do something significant. What’s the point of having a big majority unless you’re prepared to use it? …

I was certainly confident that the great majority of Australians supported what we did, but there were pockets of opposition.

He added that the way separate parties worked together to see the buyback take place was “quite magnificent”, even though many leaders had to deal with difficulties with their constituencies.

“Without their cooperation, it would have been very, very difficult,” Howard said.

John Howard at a memorial for victims of the massacre in 1996. Photograph: David Gray/David Gray/Reuters
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