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Australia news live: NSW to introduce minimum age for ebike riders; Angus Taylor calls for end to ‘net zero ideology’ | Australia news

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NSW to introduce minimum age to ride an ebike

New South Wales will introduce a minimum age to ride an ebike as part of an effort to improve rider safety, the safety of pedestrians and of the wider community.

The minimum age will be between 12 and 16 and come after an expert review by Transport for NSW. Currently, a child of any age can ride an ebike and riders of any age can carry passengers if the bike’s design allows.

The Minns government said the state would also adopt safety and performance standards similar to those in Europe to ensure ebikes act more like bicycles, an effort to remove “high-powered illegal motorbikes masquerading as ebikes” from the streets.

Any ebike deemed to be against the law will be phased out over a three-year transition period to recognise they were bought legally. From 1 March 2029, only ebikes that meet European standards will be road legal in NSW.

Ebikes in Sydney.
Ebikes in Sydney. Photograph: Andrew Quilty
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Coalition maintains ‘anyone’ being repatriated from Syria presents a risk, even children

Jonno Duniam, the shadow minister for home affairs, spoke this morning about the group of 34 women and children linked to Islamic State fighters who are stuck in Syria.

He was asked on RN if the children in the group should be subject to concern and protection from the Australian government after prime minister Anthony Albanese maintained yesterday no-one in the group would be provided any assistance to return.

Duniam said the situation was complex, but the country’s security trumped their return:

double quotation markAnyone being repatriated from this part of the world is indeed a risk when it comes to our security. We cannot ignore the risk associated with individuals, whether they be minors or indeed adults, when it comes to repatriating them here.

And indeed, when it comes to these minors, the temporary exclusion order regime does apply to individuals between the ages of 14 and 17, and some reports suggest that these aren’t just infants, they are indeed inclusive of teenagers who would be more advanced in thinking and beliefs than perhaps a younger child.

Jonno Duniam. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP



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