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Australian Is Fatally Shot by U.S. Police. Also: Julie Bishop Hits Back at Trump Comments on French First Lady. | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The Breakdown puts a selection of Australia’s daily news into context. Today’s picks: | The Breakdown puts a selection of Australia’s daily news into context. Today’s picks: |
• An Australian woman was fatally shot by police officers in the U.S. over the weekend. | |
• Foreign minister comments on Trump commenting on women. | |
• More to come... | • More to come... |
An Australian woman was fatally shot in Minneapolis on Saturday by police officers who did not have their body cameras turned on, officials said. | |
Justine Damond, a yoga and meditation practitioner, was shot as the officers were responding to her 911 call of an assault near her home in the Fulton neighborhood of Minneapolis. Ms. Damond, 40, who was from Sydney and who also went by the name Justine Ruszczyk, was engaged to be married to an American man, according to Australian news reports. | |
“They were so in love,” said Matt Omo, a close friend and a founder of his own wellness practice in Australia, who often collaborated with Ms. Damond on meditation and personal development workshops. He called her death a tragedy. “How could such a beautiful soul with only the desire to help people be shot dead by the police?” he asked. | |
Here’s our coverage of the incident. | |
[1:34 p.m.] | |
Every so often, even the most steeled, line-toeing politicians will have a moment of authenticity crack through carefully crafted rhetoric. | Every so often, even the most steeled, line-toeing politicians will have a moment of authenticity crack through carefully crafted rhetoric. |
On the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s “Insiders” on Sunday, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop was asked how she would react if President Trump told her, as he told the wife of President Emmanuel Macron of France, that she was in “good shape.” | |
“I’d be taken aback, I think. It’s a rather interesting comment to make,” she said. “I wonder if she could say the same of him.” | “I’d be taken aback, I think. It’s a rather interesting comment to make,” she said. “I wonder if she could say the same of him.” |
Ms. Bishop, as the local news media often likes to remind us, is a keen runner — and her comments suggest she’s clearly familiar with the double standards and sexism that often greet women who occupy power structures dominated by men, who tend to receive far less scrutiny of their physical appearance. | |
But it was still a break from the norm. As foreign minister, she has consistently made statements supporting Mr. Trump. “We share a common view on many issues, so we will continue to work very closely with the Trump administration,” Ms. Bishop said in January. | |
Mr. Trump has regularly commented on the appearances of women while president. Last month, speaking on the phone with the new prime minister of Ireland, he interrupted his conversation to remark that a female Irish journalist “has a nice smile on her face.” | |
His comments about France’s first lady were met with concern and ridicule over the weekend, especially on American late-night television. | |
“Only Donald Trump,” Jimmy Kimmel said, “would treat a meeting with a world leader like it’s a swingers’ key party or something.” | |
Mr. Trump has not yet responded to the criticism — or to Ms. Bishop’s retort. | Mr. Trump has not yet responded to the criticism — or to Ms. Bishop’s retort. |
[9:40 a.m.] | [9:40 a.m.] |