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Trae Young makes a comeback for the Hawks following a lengthy injury absence – Basketball Insiders

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Young Set to Return vs. Hornets

Atlanta Hawks star Trae Young will make his first appearance since late October on Thursday night when the Hawks face the Charlotte Hornets. Young missed 22 straight games after suffering a sprained right MCL on October 29 against the Brooklyn Nets. His return gives the Hawks a key offensive piece as they fight for position in the tough Eastern Conference.

Young took part in full team practice Wednesday, which paved the way for him to be available for Thursday’s game. The Hawks listed him as questionable on the injury report before officially activating him for the Hornets matchup.

Hawks Without Young Held Steady

While Young was out, Atlanta managed to win 13 of 22 games, showing it could stay competitive without its All-Star point guard. Young has been a cornerstone for the franchise over the past several years, and the team now looks to his return as a potential spark.

Before the injury, Young was averaging 17.8 points and 7.8 assists per game this season, though he struggled from three in limited sample play.

Young’s presence early in the season still stood out in his career. Over eight NBA seasons with the Hawks, he has averaged more than 25 points and nearly 10 assists per game, marking him among the league’s elite playmakers.

Trae Young, Atlanta Hawks Unlikely To Negotiate New Contract This OffseasonTrae Young, Atlanta Hawks Unlikely To Negotiate New Contract This Offseason

Game Night Reality

Charlotte proved a tough matchup for Atlanta on Thursday night. LaMelo Ball, also returning from injury, poured in 28 points and 13 assists as the Hornets shot well from deep and outpaced the Hawks. Charlotte made a total of 24 three-pointers and used strong ball movement to build a lead earlier in the game.

Atlanta rallied late, led by Jalen Johnson’s 43 points, 11 rebounds, and nine assists, but the effort fell short in a 133-126 loss. Young finished with eight points and made 10 assists in limited minutes.

What This Means for Atlanta

The Hawks now have their star point guard back, a boost the team sorely needed. Young’s court vision and shot creation can elevate Atlanta’s offense, especially in tight games. The Hawks will look to build continuity as Young gets more minutes under his belt.

Despite the loss, Young’s return is significant. Atlanta now has the pieces to make a stronger run in the second half of the season, and Young’s health will play a major role in the team’s push toward the playoffs.

Korogi Introduces Grayhus Polyhedral Base Camp Tent from Tokyo Crafts

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Bringing a taste of Japanese camping flair and fashion to the United States, the Grayhus tent from Tokyo Crafts is a fantastically geometric wilderness abode that elevates the outdoor experience, whether you’re inside or viewing from afar its juxtaposition against the organic flow of its natural surrounds. The tent smartly adapts to the situation at hand, serving as spacious open-air canopy, insect-free screen room, and guyed-out, battened-down four-person glamping shelter tested to 55 mph (85 km/h).

We’ve long been quite enamored with Japanese camping gear, from the furniture that looks meticulously primped enough to make the cover of Better Homes & Gardens to ingeniously packaged tiny campers. And let’s not forget the massive multi-room indoor/outdoor base camp tents that feel quite paradoxical parked just down the path from those impossibly miniature RVs.

We were quite excited, then, to stumble on Kōrogi, a young Portland, Oregon-based curator and retailer of camping and outdoor gear. The company doesn’t limit its global reach to Japan, but introducing Japanese outdoor wares to the US market has definitely served as one of its driving focuses early on.

Kōrogi was founded in 2024 and opened its HQ in Portland earlier this year. Beyond selling gear from familiar Japanese names like Snow Peak and Toyo Steel, the company has launched a number of Japanese brands and creators on the US market for the first time ever, including Tokyo Crafts, Asomatous and Shim.Craft.

If we’re honest, we had never heard of Tokyo Crafts prior to discovering it on Kōrogi. In fact, we discovered both brands at the same time thanks to a picture of the Grayhus tent that yanked our eyes over to Kōrogi’s website during an entirely unrelated Google hunt. We’re quite glad it did.

A youthful, spirited brand founded in 2020, Tokyo Crafts builds a variety of camping gear that injects tightly focused, premium design and reimagined beauty into age-old recreation. It introduced the Grayhus tent in Japan in 2024, aiming to offer campers a roomier dome tent alternative with a compact footprint and extra-voluminous living area. The tent is meant to provide a more portable form of glamping compared to thick, bulky canvas safari tents.

In developing a tent that could join the vehicle carrying it comfortably within what it identifies as a standard camping plot (10 x 10 m, 33 x 33 feet), Tokyo Crafts sought to further develop the half-sphere form of the classic dome tent into a fuller sphere, thereby shrinking the floor area on the ground without ceding away any interior volume.

Tokyo Crafts aimed to size the Grayhus to fit with a vehicle in a 33 x 33-ft campsite
Tokyo Crafts aimed to size the Grayhus to fit with a vehicle in a 33 x 33-ft campsite

Tokyo Crafts/Korogi

Growing a half-sphere into a full(er) sphere that can stand stably on natural terrain is, of course, much easier on paper, where you don’t have to deal with the realities of physics. You can only bend solid aluminum or composite poles so far, and the dramatic oversized U-bends that would be required to craft a full-on orb tent frame are likely to blow well past that limit.

Instead, Tokyo Crafts turns to a geodesic construction meant to emulate the size and flow of a sphere. It turns rounded surfaces into sideways pentagonal pyramids that flare the ends of the tent wide and deep. The two flared pyramids are connected by an extended dual-peak central body that houses the tall, wide roll-up doors.

Korogi is dedicated to bringing unique designs like the Grayhus to the US camping market
Korogi is dedicated to bringing unique designs like the Grayhus to the US camping market

Tokyo Crafts/Korogi

Each doorway includes both a full mesh panel and a waterproof outer door, allowing campers to enjoy al fresco lounging when the weather and local fauna cooperate, mesh the open doorway over to keep out swarming pests, or close them up completely to guard against threatening weather.

Optional transparent TPU panels are available to deliver big views without giving up full weather protection during wet or cold conditions. The optional awning kit, meanwhile, repurposes the weatherproof door fabric into a large awning, further growing the shaded base camp footprint.

Optional TPU door panel
Optional TPU door panel

Tokyo Crafts/Korogi

The Grayhus ships without a floor as standard, setting up atop the bare earth. Interestingly, though, it has an inner and outer roof, the latter helping to filter out morning light while also cutting the condensation for which single-wall tent fabrics are notorious.

An optional 13.7 x 12.7-foot (4.2 x 3.9-m) 210D polyester floor is available, and while it doesn’t zip or otherwise secure to the body fabric, it does feature a raised tub construction meant to keep out flowing water and insects. The main Grayhus tent includes skirted edges that rest on the ground to further protect against unwanted intrusions.

Tokyo Crafts Grayhus with optional floor; also note the skirts that form a barrier against water and critters
Tokyo Crafts Grayhus with optional floor; also note the skirts that form a barrier against water and critters

Tokyo Crafts/Korogi

The Grayhus is designed to sleep up to four people and features a peak height of 8.5 feet (2.6 m) for plenty of standing room. A series of 14 interior hanging points allows campers to hang lamps, clothes and other items. Tokyo Crafts says it has tested the aluminum-framed 75D polyester-bodied tent to wind speeds up to 55 mph (85 km/h).

While it’s quite large at camp, the entire Grayhus body and frame pack into a carry bag measuring 28 x 14 x 14 in (71 x 36 x 36 cm). While the 44-lb (20-kg) package certainly isn’t lightweight, it can be easily carried by a single person.

Don’t expect the Grayhus to set up too quickly. Tokyo Crafts’ own setup video takes two people close to five minutes … and that’s inside, where they aren’t actually staking or guying it out. That said, this one serves more like a big safari tent as opposed to a fast-pitching dome tent, so a longer setup time comes with the territory.

Kōrogi launched the Grayhus in the US in August as part of its greater Tokyo Crafts rollout. It’s available now for a base price of $1,200. The optional floor costs $150, the transparent TPU door panels $220/pair.

Sources: Kōrogi and Tokyo Crafts

Violence Erupts in Bangladesh Following Death of Student Protest Leader

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new video loaded: Riots Flare Up in Bangladesh After a Student Protest Leader Is Killed

Violent unrest spilled onto the streets of Dhaka, Bangladesh, following the killing of of a prominent student leader who was shot over the weekend. The offices of two leading newspapers were set on fire.

By Axel Boada

December 19, 2025

Search results for Epstein files involving Trump, Clinton, Summers, and Gates are not found.

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The Justice Department released a massive trove of files related to the late sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein on Friday, but the site housing the information was failing to turn up any results.

The data dump came on the deadline that Congress established last month for disclosing the highly anticipated information, though a top Justice official suggested that not all the documents would come out at once with more due in the coming weeks.

While President Donald Trump, former President Bill Clinton, former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates and scores of other powerful men have been linked to Epstein, their names failed to come up in a search of DOJ’s “Epstein Library.”

“No results found. Please try a different search,” the site says after queries for their names.

The site adds that “Due to technical limitations and the format of certain materials (e.g., handwritten text), portions of these documents may not be electronically searchable or may produce unreliable search results.”

However, Clinton also appears in photos that were released as does the late pop singer Michael Jackson. Other records were heavily redacted.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche told Congress that the Justice Department had identified 1,200 victims of Epstein or their relatives and redacted materials that could reveal their identities, according to the New York Times.

Last month, an overwhelmingly bipartisan vote in Congress produced legislation to force the Trump administration to release the DOJ files, though emails and photos from Epstein’s estate had already come out.

One of the sponsors of that legislation, Rep. Ro Khanna, warned on Friday that if DOJ doesn’t show that it’s complying with the law, Congress could hold impeachment hearings for Attorney General Pam Bondi and Blanche.

Earlier on Friday, Blanche told Fox News that “several hundred thousand” pages would be released on Friday. “And then, over the next couple of weeks, I expect several hundred thousand more,” he added.

Trump reveals new agreement with pharmaceutical companies to reduce drug costs | Health Updates

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United States President Donald Trump announced new agreements aimed at lowering prescription drug prices.

On Friday, alongside leaders from Bristol Myers Squibb, Gilead Sciences, and Merck, among other leading pharma giants, the president announced deals that would cut prices on their medications to match that of the developed nation with the lowest price.

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“Starting next year, American drug prices will come down fast and furious and will soon be some of the lowest in the developed world,” Trump said.

“This is the biggest thing having to do with drugs in the history of the purchase of drugs.”

Under the deals, each drugmaker will cut prices on some of the drugs sold to the Medicaid programme for low-income people, senior administration officials said, promising “massive savings” on widely used medicines without giving specific figures.

“We were subsidising the entire world. We’re not doing it anymore,” Trump said at a White House news conference, flanked by nine pharma executives.

Mehmet Oz, the director of the Centres for Medicare and Medicaid Service, said Regeneron, Johnson & Johnson, and AbbVie would visit the White House after the holidays for the launch of the government’s TrumpRx website.

US patients currently pay by far the most for prescription medicines, often nearly three times more than in other developed nations, and Trump has been pressuring drugmakers to lower their prices to what patients pay elsewhere.

The details of each deal were not immediately available, but officials said they included agreements to cut cash-pay direct-to-consumer prices of select drugs sold potentially through the TrumpRx.gov website, to launch drugs in the US at prices equal to – not lower than – those in other wealthy nations and to increase manufacturing. In return, companies can receive a three-year exemption from any tariffs.

Drug prices fall

Merck said it will sell its diabetes drugs Januvia, Janumet and Janumet XR – set to face generic competition next year – directly to US consumers at about 70 percent off list prices. If approved, its experimental cholesterol drug enlicitide will also be offered through direct-to-consumer channels.

Enlicitide is one of two Merck drugs expected to receive a speedy review under the FDA’s new, fast-track pathway, the Reuters news agency has previously reported.

Amgen said it will expand its direct-to-patient programme to include migraine drug Aimovig and rheumatoid arthritis medicine Amjevita, offering both at $299 a month – nearly 60 percent and 80 percent below current US list prices.

In July, Trump sent letters to leaders of 17 major pharmaceutical companies, outlining how they should provide so-called most-favoured -nation prices to the US government’s Medicaid health programme for low-income people, and guarantee that new drugs will not be launched at prices above those in other high-income countries.

So far, five companies have struck deals with the administration to rein in prices. They are Pfizer, Eli Lilly, AstraZeneca, Novo Nordisk and EMD Serono, the US division of Germany’s Merck.

A portion of revenues from each company’s foreign sales will also be remitted to the US to offset costs, officials said.

The companies pledged together to invest more than $150bn in the US for R&D and manufacturing, according to officials, although it was unclear whether that included earlier commitments. Several also agreed to donate drug ingredients to the US strategic reserve.

Trump has long focused on the disparity between drug prices in the US and other wealthy countries, which have government-run health systems that negotiate price discounts.

The spectre of tighter price controls by the US government initially spooked investors, but the terms of the deals announced so far have calmed many of those fears.

Analysts have noted that Medicaid, which accounts for only approximately 10 percent of US drug spending, already benefits from substantial price discounts, exceeding 80 percent in some cases.

MBW’s Weekly Round-Up: From YouTube Using Billboard Data to HYBE’s Partnership with Tyla’s Managers

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Welcome to Music Business Worldwide’s Weekly Round-up – where we make sure you caught the five biggest stories to hit our headlines over the past seven days. MBW’s Round-up is exclusively supported by BMI, a global leader in performing rights management, dedicated to supporting songwriters, composers and publishers and championing the value of music.


This week, a new report from economist Will Page revealed that the global value of music copyright reached an all-time high of $47.2 billion in 2024.

Meanwhile, YouTube announced it will stop providing data to Billboard‘s US charts after more than a decade, following changes to Billboard’s streaming methodology.

Elsewhere, HYBE made a push into Africa via a new partnership with Tyla’s managers Brandon Hixon and Colin Gayle.

Also this week, The Weeknd closed a reported $1 billion catalog deal with Lyric Capital while maintaining creative control.

Additionally, MBW broke the news that Universal Music Group proposed divesting Curve to address European Commission competition concerns over its $775 million acquisition of Downtown Music Holdings.

Here are some of the biggest headlines from the past few days…


1. GLOBAL VALUE OF MUSIC COPYRIGHT REACHED $47.2 BILLION IN 2024, SAYS NEW WILL PAGE REPORT

The global value of music copyright (both recordings and compositions) reached a new all-time high of $47.2 billion in 2024.

That’s according to a new report from Will Page, the former Chief Economist at both Spotify and UK collection society PRS for Music, published on Page’s website, Pivotal Economics.

The 2024 figure was up just $2.3 billion (5.2%) on the prior year. According to the report, “growth is slowing largely because this is the first year where the pandemic effects have vanished”… (MBW)


2. BILLBOARD JUST MADE ‘FREE’ STREAMS WORTH MORE ON ITS US CHARTS. YOUTUBE IS STILL NOT HAPPY – AND IS PULLING ITS DATA.

YouTube says it will soon stop providing data to Billboard for inclusion in the US charts, ending a partnership that has lasted more than a decade.

The decision, announced on Wednesday (December 17) by Lyor Cohen, YouTube’s Global Head of Music, comes just one day after Billboard revealed changes to its chart methodology that will actually narrow the weighting gap between paid and ad-supported streams.

Under Billboard’s current formula for the Billboard 200, one album ‘unit’ equals 1,250 paid/subscription streams or 3,750 ad-supported streams — a 1:3 ratio.

Billboard’s new methodology tightens that ratio to 1:2.5, with one album unit now equalling 1,000 paid streams or 2,500 ad-supported streams… (MBW)


3. HYBE ‘TO BUILD A GLOBAL PLATFORM FOR AFRICAN TALENT’ VIA NEW PARTNERSHIP WITH TYLA MANAGERS BRANDON HIXON AND COLIN GAYLE

South Korea-born entertainment giant HYBE has been rapidly growing its geographic footprint beyond its home market over the past few years.

First, it expanded into Japan, followed by the United States, and then Latin America in late 2023.

More recently, the company established operations in China (April 2025) and India (September 2025). Now, after expanding across Asia and the Americas, HYBE is making a push into Africa… (MBW)


4. THE WEEKND CLOSES $1 BILLION CATALOG DEAL WITH LYRIC CAPITAL (REPORT)

The Weeknd has closed a deal with Lyric Capital Group that brings outside investment into his music catalog while keeping the artist and his team as shareholders with “creative control” over his catalog.

That’s according to a report from Variety over the weekend, which cited confirmation from representatives for the artist. The reported confirmation arrives less than four months after Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter, that the Canadian singer is looking to raise roughly USD $1 billion in financing backed by his stake in publishing rights and master recordings.

The news outlet reported at the time that New York-based Lyric Capital was leading the talks and that the artist already reached out to other investors to assemble the financing package of up to $1 billion… (MBW)


5. EXCLUSIVE: UMG PROPOSES SELLING CURVE TO SECURE EU APPROVAL FOR $775M DOWNTOWN DEAL

Universal Music Group has proposed divesting Downtown’s Curve royalty accounting business to address European Commission competition concerns over its $775 million acquisition of Downtown Music Holdings.

UMG submitted formal commitments to the EC on December 11, outlining a plan to sell Curve Royalty Systems as a standalone business to an independent buyer approved by the Commission.

The EC sent out letters last week to potential buyers as part of the proposed divestment process. A document outlining the remedies package, seen by MBW, commits UMG to divesting the entire Curve business, including all employees (except two retained engineers), customer contracts, and the Curve Platform software and related assets... (MBW)


Partner message: MBW’s Weekly Round-up is supported by BMI, the global leader in performing rights management, dedicated to supporting songwriters, composers and publishers and championing the value of music. Find out more about BMI hereMusic Business Worldwide

Australia was viewed as a global frontrunner in gun regulation.

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Reuters In a photo dated July 28, 1997, Mick Roelandts, firearms reform project manager for the New South Wales Police, looks at a pile of about 4,500 prohibited firearms in Sydney that have been handed in that month under the Australian government's buyback scheme.Reuters

Hundreds of thousands of guns were handed in across Australia during the last major government buyback scheme

It was a Sunday afternoon in April 1996 when a lone gunman armed with semi-automatic rifles killed 35 people in the Australian tourist town of Port Arthur.

The massacre almost 30 years ago, which ushered in some of the strictest gun laws in the world, feels like a bygone age for many Australians.

But the Bondi Beach attack on Sunday, which left 15 dead, rekindled memories of the Tasmanian tragedy – none more so than for leading gun control advocate Roland Browne.

As the country’s deadliest modern-day mass shooting was unfolding an hour’s drive away, Mr Browne was meeting fellow gun control advocates at his home, ahead of a government meeting, to lobby for a ban on the exact type of firearm the Port Arthur gunman was using.

Mr Browne, 66, was again at home in Hobart on Sunday when he received news of the shooting at Bondi, targeting a Jewish event celebrating the first night of Hanukkah.

“There’s just a lot of similarities,” Mr Browne, who spent childhood summers in Bondi and still has family there, told the BBC.

“They’re both very public places frequented by tourists from around the nation and around the world.”

“It’s sickening and I’m bitterly disappointed in our political system whereby the voices for tighter gun laws and public health aren’t listened to until there’s a major event like this,” he added.

For decades, Australia has stood as a beacon on the world stage for its strict gun laws, he says, taking a similar path to the UK which experienced its own mass shooting in Dunblane, just one month before Port Arthur.

Even now, Mr Browne remains friends with relatives of some of the 17 victims – mostly children aged five and six – killed at a primary school in Scotland.

But despite being praised for its stringent gun laws, the reality in Australia is not clear-cut.

Roland Browne Roland Browne smiles looking directly at the camera. He has grey short hair and is wearing wire-framed glasses. There are books on a shelf in the background.Roland Browne

Roland Browne has called for tighter gun laws in Australia

Gun ownership at record high

A report by the Australia Institute earlier this year revealed that there are more than four million privately-owned firearms across the country – almost double the amount from about 20 years ago.

That equates to one gun for every seven Australians, the report says.

Queensland has the most registered guns, followed by New South Wales (NSW) and Victoria while Tasmania and the Northern Territory have the most guns per person.

The report also dispels a common view that guns are mainly owned by rural residents.

Guns are widespread in metropolitan and suburban areas, with one in three firearms in NSW located in major cities, the report said.

The total figure has risen at a lower rate than population increases, but there are now more guns in fewer hands, with every licence holder owning an average of more than four firearms.

And that’s one of the key issues that Mr Browne wants the government to address.

A map of Australia showing the total number of registered firearms in each state and territory, rounded to the nearest thousand. Queensland is highlighted in dark blue with the highest number at 1,144,000 guns. New South Wales follows with 1,140,000. Other states include Victoria (976k), South Australia (330k), Western Australia (327k), Tasmania (155k), Northern Territory (56k), and ACT (23k). A note at the bottom states that data is from individual police forces as of June 2025 or later, with Western Australia data from May 2024

Queensland has more guns overall even than Australia’s most populous state, New South Wales

Currently, only one jurisdiction – Western Australia – has a cap on the number of legal firearms that a licence holder can have. Under new laws introduced in March this year, gun owners can have between five and ten firearms, depending on the type of licence and model of firearm.

Authorities have confirmed that one of the alleged gunmen, Sajid Akram who was killed at the scene of the Bondi attack, owned six registered guns.

Mr Browne wants a cap of one to three guns, depending on the licence category, to be introduced across Australia.

But Tom Kenyon, chief executive of the Sporting Shooters Association of Australia, argues that a cap would be meaningless.

“Limiting the number of guns wouldn’t have made a difference on Sunday,” he says.

“And it wouldn’t have changed the fact that an attack occurred because those two individuals had been radicalised.”

Mr Kenyon argues that people intent on harm, without access to guns, will use other weapons, referencing the 2016 Bastille Day massacre in the French city of Nice where 86 people were killed after a man drove a truck into crowds during fireworks celebrations. The attack was claimed by Islamic State (IS).

The other alleged Bondi gunman, 24-year-old Naveed Akram, was previously investigated over links to IS, according to comments made by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

Mr Kenyon also says that more guns are found in cities because most people in Australia live in metropolitan areas and travel to other areas to hunt.

A map of Australia showing registered firearms per 100 people in each state and territory. Tasmania is highlighted in dark blue with the highest ratio at 27 guns per 100 people, meaning roughly one gun for every four people. Other states include Northern Territory (21), Queensland (20), South Australia (17), Victoria (14), New South Wales (13), Western Australia (11), and ACT (5). A note at the bottom states that data is from individual police forces as of June 2025 or later, with Western Australia data from May 2024.

Tasmania has the most guns per person in Australia

What are Australia’s current gun laws?

Gun control laws in Australia are not uniform across the country, with inconsistent implementation of the rules across states and territories.

But generally, to apply for a gun licence, you must be over 18, a “fit and proper person”, pass a training and safety course and give a “genuine reason” for having a firearm.

The eight accepted reasons include recreational hunting or pest control, target or sport shooting, for work (such as security guards and prison officers), for use in farming or animal welfare and firearms collectors.

But there are loopholes.

For example, anyone under 18 was meant to be barred from owning a firearm under the 1996 gun control reforms, but minors in various jurisdictions can have access to a firearm while under supervision, ranging from age 10 in the Northern Territory to 12 in other states.

Another situation is where a particular type of gun is banned in one state but legal elsewhere.

In the days after the Port Arthur massacre, then-Australian prime ministerJohn Howard galvanised every state and territory to overhaul the country’s gun laws.

More than 650,000 firearms were voluntarily handed in to authorities and destroyed, as part of a buyback programme. And background checks and a mandatory cooling-off period for gun sales were introduced. Automatic and semi-automatic rifles and shotguns were banned.

Similar gun reforms – a ban on semi-automatic weapons and a buyback scheme – were introduced in New Zealand after a white supremacist killed 51 Muslims at two Christchurch mosques in 2019.

Part of Howard’s reforms included scrapping self-defence as a reason for owning a firearm – a contrast to gun laws in the United States where personal protection is often the main reason for citizens to own guns.

Gun ownership in the US is much higher compared to Australia as is gun violence. The country saw 488 mass shootings – defined as where four or more people are killed or injured – last year.

Recent polling by the Australia Institute showed that seven out of ten Australians think gun laws should make it harder to access a gun and 64% agreed that current gun laws need to be strengthened.

Getty Images A man, in a blue jumpsuit and wearing a white hardhat, crouching on top of a large pile of rifles while holding one Getty Images

An estimated 650,000 firearms were handed in and destroyed after the Port Arthur massacre

Fresh reform for gun laws

In the hours after the Bondi shooting, the NSW Premier Chris Minns was unequivocal about the need to tighten the state’s gun laws.

“If you’re not a farmer, you’re not involved in agriculture, why do you need these massive weapons?” he asked.

And less than 24 hours after the shooting, Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese hosted an emergency meeting where leaders from across the country pledged to tighten gun laws. On Friday he announced a national gun buyback scheme “to help get guns off our streets”, the first scheme of its size since 1996.

Other proposals include:

  • limiting the number of guns someone can legally own
  • limiting “open-ended” licensing
  • making Australian citizenship a condition of owning a firearm
  • improving intelligence sharing when licence applications are being assessed

Albanese said there should also be regular reviews of licence holders.

“People’s circumstances can change,” he said. “People can be radicalised over a period of time.”

Getty A couple with their backs to the camera embrace in front a floral tribute on the promenade with the beach and ocean in the backgroundGetty

Fifteen people were killed when two gunmen opened fire at Bondi Beach on Sunday

The swift action prompted Howard – the architect of the 1996 gun laws – to weigh in.

While he supported stricter gun laws, Howard said the move was an “attempted diversion” from the real cause of the tragedy, which he said was a rise in antisemitism in recent years.

Mr Kenyon believes the moves to tighten gun laws are a waste of resources.

“All that time and effort and political capital could be spent combating radicalisation of individuals,” he says.

The only thing that might have prevented Sunday’s attack was better intelligence-sharing that would have flagged the gunmen’s links to extremist ideology to the NSW firearms’ registry, he says.

Elsewhere, one of the headline reforms proposed in 1996 – a national firearms register – is yet to be created, with authorities saying the database is “expected to be operational by mid-2028”.

Little had been done to implement the measure until the 2022 fatal shooting of two police officers and a civilian in Wieambilla became a catalyst to speed the process up.

The Bondi shooting has now propelled the government to list the creation of the register as a priority.

Recreational hunting under spotlight

Mr Browne believes the application process for a gun licence is too easy and that licences for recreational hunting should be abolished as its definition is ambiguous.

Sajid Akram owned a recreational hunting licence.

But recreational hunting contributes a “valuable social good” to Australia, argues Mr Kenyon, saying that hunters remove millions of feral animals such as rabbits, foxes and cats.

He was just 10 when he picked up his first gun. Now 53, he goes on regular hunting trips – often shooting deer in Victoria’s high country – and competes in pistol shooting events six times a year.

Hunting isn’t just a pastime for him, it’s about family and community connections. He taught his three children – all adults now – how to shoot when they were teens.

“All my life I’ve had the opportunity to do it and I’ve enjoyed it,” Mr Kenyon, a former Labour politician in South Australia, says, “so I want my kids to have the same opportunity”.

Supplied A man in a light collared shirt, smiling at the cameraSupplied

Pro-gun advocate Tom Kenyon says tightening gun laws is a waste of resources

In the wake of the Port Arthur massacre, self-loading firearms were banned, resulting in a drop in gun-related deaths, but the risk to public safety has now shifted to high-powered fast-loading rifles with magazines that can shoot up to five rounds, of the kind believed to have been used by the gunmen.

“If you watch the video, you’ll see him firing rapidly with his rifle,” Mr Browne says, referring to footage of one of the gunmen shooting from a footbridge leading to Bondi Beach.

“If he didn’t have a magazine in that rifle, he would have had to manually reload each time,” which would dramatically reduce – but not eliminate – the threat of a mass shooting.

Mass shootings remain rare in Australia.

In 2018, a Western Australian grandfather killed his wife, his daughter and four grandchildren before turning the gun on himself in what was, at the time, the worst such incident since Port Arthur.

For Mr Browne, Australia is a safe country but incidents involving firearms are not uncommon, ranging from neighbourhood disputes to gang shootings.

“This is a reflection on guns being in the wrong hands, a legacy of poor storage allowing guns to be stolen and sold – and thus move into black markets.”

But the issue of gun control isn’t just about the physical firearm.

“It’s like a plane crash, it’s never just one thing. It’s a culmination of a lot of factors,” he says. Australia needs better assessment of whether a licence holder is a suitable candidate and more stringent rules on the types of guns that can be legally owned, he says.

Tragedy is a wake-up call

In the aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre, Mr Browne met with many of the survivors and families of the victims including Walter Mikac, whose wife Nanette and two young daughters were among the 35 people killed.

Mr Mikac, who founded the Alannah and Madeline Foundation charity to honour his children, said the Bondi shooting was a “horrific reminder” of ensuring Australia’s gun laws protect everyone.

“After Port Arthur, Australia made a collective commitment to put community safety first, and that commitment remains as important today as ever,” he said in a statement.

Mr Browne echoed those sentiments.

Gun laws need to be reformed to “keep up-to-date with changing community attitudes, technological advances and to rectify identified deficiencies,” Mr Browne says.

“It’s sad that it takes such a tragedy to get people to wake up and listen.”

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Europe Approves Loan to Ukraine Without Relying on Russian Funds

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new video loaded: Europe Agrees on Loan to Ukraine Without Using Russian Funds

transcript

transcript

Europe Agrees on Loan to Ukraine Without Using Russian Funds

European leaders agreed on Friday to provide Ukraine with a $105 billion loan but failed to reach a consensus on using Russian government assets frozen in Europe to back it.

As a matter of urgency, we will provide a loan backed by the European Union budget. This will address the urgent financial needs of Ukraine, and Ukraine will only repay this loan once Russia pays reparations. I think it was an extremely bad decision, which bring Europe closer to the war. And it looks like a loan, but of course, the Ukrainians will never be able to pay it back. So it’s basically a lost money.

European leaders agreed on Friday to provide Ukraine with a $105 billion loan but failed to reach a consensus on using Russian government assets frozen in Europe to back it.

By Nader Ibrahim

December 19, 2025

Sphere Entertainment Co stock reaches record high of 93.56 USD

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Sphere Entertainment Co stock hits all-time high of 93.56 USD