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Australia politics live: arrest after car allegedly rams Russian consulate; ‘migrants should be celebrated’, Victoria’s deputy premier says | Australia news

Car crashes into Russian consulate building’s gates in Sydney

Caitlin Cassidy

A man is in custody after a car crashed into Sydney’s Russian consulate building this morning.

In a statement, NSW police said about 8am on Monday, officers were called to the building on Fullerton Street in Woollahra following reports of an unauthorised car parked in the driveway.

They said when police arrived and attempted to speak to a man, 39, who was behind the wheel, he allegedly drove into the consulate’s front gate.

The man was arrested and taken to Surry Hills police station where he was assisting police with inquiries.

A 24-year-old constable injured his hand in the incident and was treated by paramedics at the scene. There were no other reports of injuries, police said.

“Inquiries are continuing,” police said.

A spokesperson for NSW Ambulance confirmed they received a call to attend the address just after 8am. The man was treated on the scene for a cut to his hand and did not require hospitalisation, they said.

A Google Maps street view of the consulate general of the Russian Federation in Woollahra, Sydney.
A Google Maps street view of the consulate general of the Russian Federation in Woollahra, Sydney. Composite: Google Maps
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Key events

Penry Buckley

War of words over workplace compensation at NSW estimates

The NSW industrial relations minister, Sophie Cotsis, is appearing before budget estimates today, where she has had a heated exchange with Liberal MP Damien Tudehope over the government’s controversial workplace compensation reforms.

The bill, which has been sent to a parliamentary inquiry, would lift the threshold at which people with a psychological injury can receive ongoing financial support or claim damages, and limit their compensation payments to 2.5 years.

Tudehope has asked the minister whether the government consulted with injured workers before making the decision to lift the threshold for whole person impairment (WPI) to 31%

“You’ve told us today [that] this is all about saving dollars … so did you actually talk to injured workers?” he said.

Cotsis said she has met with workers who have expressed concerns, but said the changes are needed to alleviate the burden on struggling state insurer icare, which was inherited from the previous government. She said:

When we came into government, we saw a massive spike in the number of psychological injuries … the reality is that [the former Coalition] government left people to languish in a system.

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