Gentlefolk,
This post describes our main activities during the month of June 2025.
The contents of this post are in the following sequence:
Photos of our activities during June 2025.
News items which caught my eye in June 2025.
A brief summary by MSNBC of key actions by President Trump during June 2025.
Highlight of June 2025
Our trip to Sri Lanka 10 - 24 June 2025. This was our first overseas trip for a year. We were concerned about Vera following her fall last November, but she managed pretty well. Overall impression: a nice country and nice people (many similarities with Indonesia).
Snapshot of Sri Lanka: Ancient culture. Area 66,000 sq km, Population 22 million. Religion: Sinhalese Buddhists 70%, Tamil Hindus 13%, Moor Moslems 9%, Christians 7%. Foreign Powers: Portuguese 1505 - 1656; Dutch 1656 - 1796; British 1796 - 1948. Granted independence in 1948, became a republic in 1972, new constitution and name in 1978: now The Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka. Rebellion by the Tamil Tigers took 26 years to defeat (1983 - 2009). Economic crisis 2019 - 2022.Nice country and people. Many similarities with Indonesia.
Herewith photos of some of our activities in June 2025:

Marg playing charades.

David's turn.

Sue also had a go.
Tour of Sri Lanka, 10 - 24 June 2025
I took many photos during our trip to Sri Lanka - some are shown below.A daily summary of our itinerary follows the photos (below).

We flew Singapore Air from Brisbane to Singapore, 7 hours transit and then on to Colombo.

The flight from Brisbane to Singapore was full - in fact, all the four SIA flights were pretty full.

Singapore Airport is rated as one of the best in the world, so spacious and well designed (we just hope Sydney's new airport will be as good).

A construction site at Singpore Airport - it was past 7pm and the workers were still hard at it (probably would have knocked off at 4pm in OZ). No wonder they get things done quickly in Asia.

Our group of 15 had an excellent bus for our tour. The driver was very good, and his assistant (pictured here) was always friendly and helpful.
![]() |
Marg playing charades. |
![]() |
David's turn. |
![]() |
Sue also had a go. |
Tour of Sri Lanka, 10 - 24 June 2025
I took many photos during our trip to Sri Lanka - some are shown below.
![]() |
We flew Singapore Air from Brisbane to Singapore, 7 hours transit and then on to Colombo. |





We were able to spread out and each person had a seat to themselves.


Interior of St Mary's Catholic Church, Negombo.

Fishing fleet. A constant struggle to survive.

Drying the catch at the beach.

Visiting the Buddhist Temple at Negombo.

Reclining Buddha statue. The Buddhist shrines/temples in Thailand are more impressive and the Thais seem more devout.

Tour of Polonnaruwa. This kingdom was sacked by invaders from India (King fled and established a new capital at Kandy).

Local school excursion.

Vera & Judy. It was a hot day and Judy helped Vera get around.

Reclining Buddha statue.

These two large Buddha statues survived the invasion/war by being covered & hidden by local villagers.

Buffet lunches at local (up-market) restaurants were delicious (around A$15). Breakfasts were always included at the hotels and usually offered a very good selection of western and asian food.

Our group at dinner, from left: Sarah, Matt, Brian, Doc, Annie, Robyn, Darren, Vera, me, Peter & Jan (the 4 girls from Melbourne Terri, Karen, Judy & Chris had eaten earlier).

Buddhist Temple.

We didn't see many monks, not like in Thailand where monks (and Buddhist shrines) are everywhere.



We visited the Tiesh Gem Museum in Kandy. These "factory visits" are really clever marketing exercises, but can also be informative and a nice distraction.

In Kandy we stayed in The Grand Kandyan Hotel. Ornate, with a Middle Eastern feel. Actually, there was a big Muslim wedding in the Ballroom the night we stayed there - hundreds of guests, very flash.

A view of a part of Kandy from our hotel balcony. Kandy is the second largest city (after Colombo, which dominates Sri Lanka's political and commercial life).

We visited the Royal Botanical Garden in Kandy - many interesting plants and trees.


You can see why this one was called "cannon ball tree".























Getting higher, into tea country. Reminded us of the Puncak hills outside Jakarta. The highest elevation in Sri Lanka is about 2,500 m above sea level.




Vera next to an original lift, still working.

Richard Nixon stayed at the Grand Hotel in the 1950s.

Marshall Tito (Yugoslavia) was another guest.

Also Roger Moore.

Many tourists use tuk-tuks to visit local sights - much cheaper than travel agency's cars and buses.

A waterfall near Ella.

Our next stop was Yala. We stayed at the Double Tree by Hilton outside the town. Nice rooms. The hotel boasted it has the biggest swimming pool in Sri Lanka - it was enormous!












Nice decor of the Double Tree by Hilton hotel, lots of bamboo.


We did a 3 hour safari in Yala National Park.

Our transport for the safari.

We saw many birds and animals, but the highlight was seeing a leopard, which, we were told, is a rare experience.

A huge elephant.





On the drive from Yala to Galle we stopped to see the "stilt fishermen". This was a traditional fishing method, but it is just for tourists today.


We met the coach of the Bangladesh Cricket Team, West Indian cricketer Phil Simmons. He played for the West Indies from 1987-99.


The Radisson Blu Hotel had a nice pool/garden. We were told not to swin in the sea - dangerous rips.

Rashid was our self-appointed guide around the commercial area of Galle.

Rashid explained aspects of the local Buddhist temple (it featured a number of Hindu gods!).

Fresh produce was cheap and plentiful.





Different types of mango on offer. Rupees1,000 is about A$5.

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Brian and I had a coffee in The Biker's Cafe. The owner's huge motor bike was parked inside the cafe.

Occasionally we saw cows wandering the streets. Cows are not regarded as sacred by Buddhists, but seem to be tolerated.

We came across girls playing netball.

Galle's Old City shows influences of Portuguese, Dutch and British times.

This Dutch Reformed Church was built in 1755.



Interior of the Dutch Reformed Church. It was in much better shape than the Anglican Church nearby.

Many of the buildings in the Old City are being renovated - it will be an attractive area in the future.

Galle's Catholic cathedral (1875) looked in good shape.



The All Saints Anglican Church (1871) in the Old City, was in need of some TLC.

This old building had been converted into the attractive VOC Cafe (Dutch East India Company).


The architecture of Galle's main train station was disappointing.

On the drive from Galle to Colombo we stopped at a Mask Museum (and shop, of course).

Also stopped at a turtle hatchery. They breed the babies, and then release them into the ocean. We were told that only one-in-a-thousand make it to maturity.

This turtle weighed 7 kgs.

The beach at the turtle hatchery. Apparently they always return to their "home" beach to lay eggs. Many of the beaches we saw have had to be stabilised with large rocks to stop erosion.

Some local primary school students.

In Colombo we visited the Independence Memorial.


Some gorgeous colonial architecture in Colombo.

The main railway station in Colombo.


In Colombo we stayed one night at the Hilton Hotel. A group of about 30 boys from The King's School, Sydney where on a cricket tour of Sri Lanka.

The foyer of the Hilton Hotel - very nice, it was certainly the best hotel we stayed in.

We did a city tour of Colombo. Many interesting old buildings. First stop was this old Anglican church.

Interior of St Peter's Church.

The colonials lived well in Ceylon.

Busy China Street in the commercial heart of downtown Colombo.

Our guide took us The Cricket Club which is a haunt of expats in Colombo (the manager is an Australian lady from Melbourne who moved to Colombo with her husband 30 years ago).

Cricket memorabilia.

Mainly local (Lion) draught beers on offer at The Cricket Club - about A$10 for a pint.

The Galle Face Hotel dates back to 1864.

Che Guevara stayed here.

Also Donald Bradman.

And author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

The Duke of Edinburgh was stationed in Sri Lanka as a young naval officer - this was his first car.
Back to reality in Nirimba

Friends from Canberra, Tieke and Robin Brown, popped in for lunch. We hoped that they would stay for a few days, but that was not to be. Anyway, it was good to see them again.
Vera
& Alex Trip-a-Deal “Luxury Sri Lanka”
10 – 25 June 2025
(Alex Olah tour client number 4904 429 908)
Date
Itinerary
/ City
Accommodation
Day 0
Mon 9 June
(Nirimba to
Brisbane on Sunday afternoon 8 June)
Monday free
in Brisbane
Stay with Jen
& Tom at The Gap.
To Airport on
Tuesday morning.
Day 1
Tues 10 June
Brisbane to
Singapore
SQ256 9.20am / 3.25pm
Singapore to
Colombo
SQ468 10.20pm
/ 11.35pm
Met at
Colombo Airport by Trip-a-Deal rep
Hotel Sentitdo
Heritance Negombo
175 Lewis Place,
Negombo 11500
Day 2
Wed 11 June
AM: Free
morning
PM: Negombo
City Tour
Hotel Sentitdo
Heritance Negombo
175 Lewis
Place, Negombo 11500
Day 3
Thurs 12 June
Negombo to
Sigiriya to Kandalama (140km day)
(we did not
climb the rock at Sigiriya)
Hotel Heritance
Kandalama
Dambulla, Ph:
+94 66 555 000
Day 4
Fri 13 June
Kandalama to
Polonnaruwa
AM: look
around Polonnaruwa
PM: two
optional tours (Jeep safari or cooking)
Hotel
Heritance Kandalama
Dambulla, Ph:
+94 66 555 000
Day 5
Sat 14 June
Kandalama to
Kandy (100km)
Visit spice
garden at Matale
City tour of
Kandy
Cultural show
The Grand
Kandyan Hotel
89 / 10 Lady
Gordern’s Drive, Kandy
Day 6
Sun 15 June
Kandy to
Peradeniya to Nuwara Eliya (80km day)
Visit Royal Botanical
Garden
Hotel
Heritance Tea Factory
Kandapola
22220, Ph: +94 525
555 000
Day 7
Mon 16 June
AM: free
PM: Nuwara
Eliya City Tour
High tea at
the Grand Hotel
Hotel
Heritance Tea Factory
Kandapola
22220, Ph: +94 525
555 000
Day 8
Tues 17 June
Nuwara Eliya
to Ella to Yala (190km day)
Ella: Ravana
Falls & 9 arch bridge
Double Tree
by Hilton Weerawila Rajawarna Resort, Weerawila
Watta, Wirawila 82632
Ph: +94 472
030 100
Day 9
Wed 18 June
AM Yala city tour & markets
PM Yala: Wildlife Jeep Safari
Double Tree
by Hilton Weerawila Rajawarna Resort, Weerawila
Watta, Wirawila 82632 Ph: +94 472
030 100
Day 10
Thurs 9 June
Yala to
Koggala (155km day)
See beaches and stilt
fishing
Cricket match at Galle Cricket Oval Sri Lanka v Bangladesh
Hotel
Radisson Blu Resort Galle
523C Colombo
Main Road, Galle 80280
Day 11
Fri 20 June
AM: free
PM: Galle
City tour
Dinner in Old City.
Hotel
Radisson Blu Resort Galle
523C Colombo
Main Road, Galle 80280
Day 12
Sat 21 June
Free day
Hotel
Radisson Blu Resort Galle
523C Colombo
Main Road, Galle 80280
Day 13
Sun 22 June
Galle to
Ambalangoda to Kosgoda to Colombo
Mask factory
and museum.
Kosgoda
Turtle Hatchery.
Colombo
Hilton Hotel
2 Sir Chittampalam
A Gardiner Mawatha
Colombo 00200, Ph: +94 112
492 492
Day 14
Mon 23 June
AM: Free (Vera & I went to the local market opposite the Fort Railway Station).
PM: Colombo
City Tour
Independence Monument; St Peter's Church; The Cricket Club; The Galle Face Hotel.
Transfer to
Airport after dinner on the roof-top of the Kingsbury Hotel.
Day 15
Tues 24 June
Colombo to
Singapore
SQ469 00:50am
/ 7.20am
Singapore to
Brisbane
SQ245 9.55am
/ 7.30pm
News items which caught my eye in June 2025.
($ are US dollars unless otherwise shown)
Global
Canada: 200 wildfires
burning across Canada.
Formula 1: Australian
Oscar Piastri (McLaren) now leading the 2025 driver's championship.
Poland: Right-wing
candidate Karol Nawrocks elected President.
Islam: holy day Eid al
Adha was celebrated in Muslim
countries on 6 June.
South Korea: new President
elected, Lee Jae Myung.
Vietnam: ended the
“maximum 2 child” policy.
European Central
Bank: cut interest rates by 0.25% to 2%.
Soccer: Tottenham
Hotspurs sacked Australian manager Ange Postecoglou. Portugal beat Spain to
win the “Nation’s League”.
The Economist: in 2000 an
estimated 1.6M baby girls were aborted (preference for boys), in 2025 will
drop to abut 200,000.
Sailing: Ryan Reynolds
and Hugh Jackman became part owners of the Australian SailGP team.
Tennis French Open:
Carlos Alcarez (22) beat Jannick Sinner
(23) 4-6, 6-7, 6-4, 7-6, 7-6 in 5h29m to win the Men’s Singles. Coco
Gauff beat Aryna Sabalenka 6-7, 6-2, 6-4 to win the Women’s Singles.
Austria: former student of
Graz school shot 10 dead, injured 12.
UK: new director of MI6
is Blaise Metreweli, first female head.
G7 meeting: Canada hosted;
Trump left early.
Economist’s EIU Livable
Cities: Best: Copenhagen; Vienna; Zurich; Melbourne; Geneva; Sydney. Worst:
Damascus; Tripoli; Dhaka; Karachi; Lagos; Harare; Port Moresby.
QS World
University rankings: MIT; IC London; Stanford; Oxford; Harvard;
Cambridge; ETH Zurich; NU Singapore. Peking U was ranked 14th;
Tsinghua U 17th; Melbourne U 19th ; UNSW 20th ;
ANU 32nd.
NATO meeting: Trump attended;
most NATO members agreed to increase spending on defence (target 5% of GDP by
2035).
Israel –
Hamas & Hezbollah & Iran
Many Palestinians
killed and injured near food distribution station in Gaza, run by the Gaza
Humanitarian Foundation (set up by Israel).
At least 4,500
Gazans have died since Israel’s current offensive began on 18 March (85 yesterday 29 June).
IDF bombed
targets in Beirut suburbs.
Norway, Canada,
NZ, UK, and Australia sanctioned (banned from entry and assets frozen) two
far-right Israeli Ministers for repeated incitements to violence against Palestinians
in the occupied West Bank.
13 June Israel
attacked 100 targets in Iran (military sites and also military leaders and
nuclear scientists); Iran retaliated by firing missiles at Israel – most were
shot down. Over the following week 610 Iranians died and 28 Israelis.
22 June US bombed
Iranian nuclear installations. Trump then brokered a ceasefire truce between
Israel and Iran.
Russian
invasion of Ukraine
The Economist
estimated Russian casualties in the conflict (killed and injured) close to
one million.
In daring
“Operation Spider’s Web” Ukrainian drones attacked 4 military airfields
across Russia and damaged dozens of planes (est value $7B). Also, underwater
explosives damaged the main bridge to Crimea.
USA
After managing
DOGE for 129 days, Trump held a farewell ceremony for Musk in the Oval
Office. But a few days later, on 6 June, Musk publicly criticized Trump’s
“Big Beautiful Bill”, accusing the Bill of increasing USA’s deficit and negating
DOGE’s efforts to cut Federal Govt spending. Their “Bromance” was
dramatically over.
Trump increased
the import tariff on steel and aluminum from 25% to 50%.
Trump deployed
National Guard to help quell anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles – Gov Newsome
said it was “over reaction”. Anti-Trump/ICE demonstrations in many cities.
Trump announced a
ban on visitors from 12 countries, and a partial ban on 7 others.
Finally, Trump
and Xi spoke on trade – agreed to high level talks the following week in
London, at which a deal was agreed.
14 June (Trump’s
79th birthday) large military parade in Washington DC to mark 250th
anniversary of the US Army. Many “no king” anti-Trump demonstrations across
America.
Egyptian asylum
seeker Mohamed Jabry Soliman was charged with fire-bombing a Jewish
gathering in Boulder Colorado.
Bill Gates
(Microsoft) said that he will give away 99% of his fortune to charities.
Trump approved
Nippon Steel’s takeover of US Steel for $15B, with the US Govt getting a “golden
share”.
27 June the US Supreme
Court by 6-3 restricted the ability of lower courts to delay President’s initiatives
(such as changing birthright citizenship).
Trump stopped
trade negotiations with Canada to force Canada not to introduce a 3% tax on
digital companies (such as Google and Facebook, etc).
Wall Street (DJI. S&P, Nasdaq etc) hit record highs (despite Middle East conflicts, tariff wars, etc).
Australia
Senator Dorinda
Cox left the Greens to join Labor.
After another
recount, the AEC declared independent Nicolette Boele the winner in
Bradfield, but 26 votes.
Aussie sprinter
Lachlan Kennedy (21) ran 100m in 9.98secs.
The ABC announced
termination of its popular Q & A program, after 18 years. Will offer 44
redundancy packages.
Qld won the
second State of Origin Rugby League game 26-24 (although NSW scored 5 tries
to 4). Series now one-all.
Remuneration of
top CEOs in 2024: Robert Thompson (News Corp) A$42M; Victor Herrero (Lovisa
Holdings) A$40M; Shemara Wikramanayake (Macquarie Group) A$30M; Greg Goodman
(Goodman Group) A$27M; Mick Farrell (ResMed) A$20M; Mike Henry (BHP) A$19M.
MSNBC
Trump’s key actions in week to 4 June 2025
Saw Trump-backed nationalist Karol Nawrocki win the Polish
presidency, a contrast with recent elections in Canada and Australia.
Said a reporter’s question about the Wall Street joke “Trump
Always Chickens Out” (TACO) on his proposed tariffs was “nasty.”
Had sweeping tariffs blocked by a three-judge panel on the
U.S. Court of International Trade, though an appeals court later paused the
block.
Called Leonard Leo, the influential former chair of the
conservative Federalist Society, a “sleazebag” who “probably hates America.”
Said that people should not feel bad for Joe Biden for
having prostate cancer and shared a social media post claiming he was replaced
by a robotic clone.
MSNBC Trump’s key actions in week to 25 June 2025
Authorized airstrikes on three nuclear facilities in Iran:
Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan.
Dropped an f-bomb when responding to reporters about Iran
and Israel accusing each other of violating a ceasefire.
Rescinded a rule that blocked logging and road construction
on 58 million acres of national forest lands.
Called for a special prosecutor to investigate his baseless
claims that the 2020 election was stolen.
Posted on social media during Juneteenth that there are “too
many non-working holidays in America.”
......
That's it for this post.
Best wishes, stay healthy and keep smiling.
Vera & Alex Olah
Caloundra Australia
Monday 30 June 2025.









































Vera
& Alex Trip-a-Deal “Luxury Sri Lanka”
10 – 25 June 2025
(Alex Olah tour client number 4904 429 908)
Date |
Itinerary
/ City
|
Accommodation |
Day 0 Mon 9 June |
(Nirimba to
Brisbane on Sunday afternoon 8 June) Monday free
in Brisbane |
Stay with Jen
& Tom at The Gap. To Airport on
Tuesday morning. |
Day 1 Tues 10 June |
Brisbane to
Singapore SQ256 9.20am / 3.25pm SQ468 10.20pm
/ 11.35pm |
Met at
Colombo Airport by Trip-a-Deal rep Hotel Sentitdo
Heritance Negombo 175 Lewis Place,
Negombo 11500 |
Day 2 Wed 11 June |
AM: Free
morning PM: Negombo
City Tour |
Hotel Sentitdo
Heritance Negombo 175 Lewis
Place, Negombo 11500 |
Day 3 Thurs 12 June |
Negombo to
Sigiriya to Kandalama (140km day) (we did not
climb the rock at Sigiriya) |
Hotel Heritance
Kandalama Dambulla, Ph:
+94 66 555 000 |
Day 4 Fri 13 June |
Kandalama to
Polonnaruwa AM: look
around Polonnaruwa PM: two
optional tours (Jeep safari or cooking) |
Hotel
Heritance Kandalama Dambulla, Ph:
+94 66 555 000 |
Day 5 Sat 14 June |
Kandalama to
Kandy (100km) Visit spice
garden at Matale City tour of
Kandy Cultural show
|
The Grand
Kandyan Hotel 89 / 10 Lady
Gordern’s Drive, Kandy |
Day 6 Sun 15 June |
Kandy to
Peradeniya to Nuwara Eliya (80km day) Visit Royal Botanical
Garden |
Hotel
Heritance Tea Factory Kandapola 22220, Ph: +94 525 555 000 |
Day 7 Mon 16 June |
AM: free PM: Nuwara
Eliya City Tour High tea at
the Grand Hotel |
Hotel
Heritance Tea Factory Kandapola 22220, Ph: +94 525 555 000 |
Day 8 Tues 17 June |
Nuwara Eliya
to Ella to Yala (190km day) Ella: Ravana
Falls & 9 arch bridge
|
Double Tree by Hilton Weerawila Rajawarna Resort, Weerawila Watta, Wirawila 82632 Ph: +94 472
030 100 |
Day 9 Wed 18 June |
AM Yala city tour & markets PM Yala: Wildlife Jeep Safari |
Double Tree by Hilton Weerawila Rajawarna Resort, Weerawila Watta, Wirawila 82632 Ph: +94 472 030 100 |
Day 10
Thurs 9 June |
Yala to
Koggala (155km day) See beaches and stilt
fishing Cricket match at Galle Cricket Oval Sri Lanka v Bangladesh |
Hotel
Radisson Blu Resort Galle 523C Colombo
Main Road, Galle 80280 |
Day 11 Fri 20 June |
AM: free PM: Galle
City tour Dinner in Old City. |
Hotel
Radisson Blu Resort Galle 523C Colombo
Main Road, Galle 80280 |
Day 12 Sat 21 June |
Free day |
Hotel
Radisson Blu Resort Galle 523C Colombo
Main Road, Galle 80280 |
Day 13 Sun 22 June |
Galle to
Ambalangoda to Kosgoda to Colombo Mask factory
and museum. Kosgoda
Turtle Hatchery.
|
Colombo
Hilton Hotel 2 Sir Chittampalam
A Gardiner Mawatha Colombo 00200, Ph: +94 112 492 492 |
Day 14 Mon 23 June |
AM: Free (Vera & I went to the local market opposite the Fort Railway Station). PM: Colombo
City Tour Independence Monument; St Peter's Church; The Cricket Club; The Galle Face Hotel. Transfer to Airport after dinner on the roof-top of the Kingsbury Hotel. |
|
Day 15 Tues 24 June |
Colombo to
Singapore SQ469 00:50am
/ 7.20am Singapore to
Brisbane SQ245 9.55am
/ 7.30pm |
|
News items which caught my eye in June 2025.
($ are US dollars unless otherwise shown)
Global
|
Canada: 200 wildfires
burning across Canada. Formula 1: Australian Oscar Piastri (McLaren) now leading the 2025 driver's championship. Poland: Right-wing
candidate Karol Nawrocks elected President. Islam: holy day Eid al
Adha was celebrated in Muslim
countries on 6 June. South Korea: new President
elected, Lee Jae Myung. Vietnam: ended the
“maximum 2 child” policy. European Central
Bank: cut interest rates by 0.25% to 2%. Soccer: Tottenham
Hotspurs sacked Australian manager Ange Postecoglou. Portugal beat Spain to
win the “Nation’s League”. The Economist: in 2000 an
estimated 1.6M baby girls were aborted (preference for boys), in 2025 will
drop to abut 200,000. Sailing: Ryan Reynolds
and Hugh Jackman became part owners of the Australian SailGP team. Tennis French Open:
Carlos Alcarez (22) beat Jannick Sinner
(23) 4-6, 6-7, 6-4, 7-6, 7-6 in 5h29m to win the Men’s Singles. Coco
Gauff beat Aryna Sabalenka 6-7, 6-2, 6-4 to win the Women’s Singles. Austria: former student of
Graz school shot 10 dead, injured 12. UK: new director of MI6
is Blaise Metreweli, first female head. G7 meeting: Canada hosted;
Trump left early. Economist’s EIU Livable
Cities: Best: Copenhagen; Vienna; Zurich; Melbourne; Geneva; Sydney. Worst:
Damascus; Tripoli; Dhaka; Karachi; Lagos; Harare; Port Moresby. QS World
University rankings: MIT; IC London; Stanford; Oxford; Harvard;
Cambridge; ETH Zurich; NU Singapore. Peking U was ranked 14th;
Tsinghua U 17th; Melbourne U 19th ; UNSW 20th ;
ANU 32nd. NATO meeting: Trump attended;
most NATO members agreed to increase spending on defence (target 5% of GDP by
2035).
|
Israel –
Hamas & Hezbollah & Iran |
Many Palestinians
killed and injured near food distribution station in Gaza, run by the Gaza
Humanitarian Foundation (set up by Israel). At least 4,500
Gazans have died since Israel’s current offensive began on 18 March (85 yesterday 29 June). IDF bombed
targets in Beirut suburbs. Norway, Canada,
NZ, UK, and Australia sanctioned (banned from entry and assets frozen) two
far-right Israeli Ministers for repeated incitements to violence against Palestinians
in the occupied West Bank. 13 June Israel
attacked 100 targets in Iran (military sites and also military leaders and
nuclear scientists); Iran retaliated by firing missiles at Israel – most were
shot down. Over the following week 610 Iranians died and 28 Israelis. 22 June US bombed
Iranian nuclear installations. Trump then brokered a ceasefire truce between
Israel and Iran.
|
Russian
invasion of Ukraine |
The Economist
estimated Russian casualties in the conflict (killed and injured) close to
one million. In daring
“Operation Spider’s Web” Ukrainian drones attacked 4 military airfields
across Russia and damaged dozens of planes (est value $7B). Also, underwater
explosives damaged the main bridge to Crimea.
|
USA
|
After managing
DOGE for 129 days, Trump held a farewell ceremony for Musk in the Oval
Office. But a few days later, on 6 June, Musk publicly criticized Trump’s
“Big Beautiful Bill”, accusing the Bill of increasing USA’s deficit and negating
DOGE’s efforts to cut Federal Govt spending. Their “Bromance” was
dramatically over. Trump increased
the import tariff on steel and aluminum from 25% to 50%. Trump deployed
National Guard to help quell anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles – Gov Newsome
said it was “over reaction”. Anti-Trump/ICE demonstrations in many cities. Trump announced a
ban on visitors from 12 countries, and a partial ban on 7 others. Finally, Trump
and Xi spoke on trade – agreed to high level talks the following week in
London, at which a deal was agreed. 14 June (Trump’s
79th birthday) large military parade in Washington DC to mark 250th
anniversary of the US Army. Many “no king” anti-Trump demonstrations across
America. Egyptian asylum
seeker Mohamed Jabry Soliman was charged with fire-bombing a Jewish
gathering in Boulder Colorado. Bill Gates
(Microsoft) said that he will give away 99% of his fortune to charities. Trump approved
Nippon Steel’s takeover of US Steel for $15B, with the US Govt getting a “golden
share”. 27 June the US Supreme
Court by 6-3 restricted the ability of lower courts to delay President’s initiatives
(such as changing birthright citizenship). Trump stopped
trade negotiations with Canada to force Canada not to introduce a 3% tax on
digital companies (such as Google and Facebook, etc). Wall Street (DJI. S&P, Nasdaq etc) hit record highs (despite Middle East conflicts, tariff wars, etc).
|
Australia |
Senator Dorinda
Cox left the Greens to join Labor. After another
recount, the AEC declared independent Nicolette Boele the winner in
Bradfield, but 26 votes. Aussie sprinter
Lachlan Kennedy (21) ran 100m in 9.98secs. The ABC announced
termination of its popular Q & A program, after 18 years. Will offer 44
redundancy packages. Qld won the second State of Origin Rugby League game 26-24 (although NSW scored 5 tries to 4). Series now one-all. Remuneration of
top CEOs in 2024: Robert Thompson (News Corp) A$42M; Victor Herrero (Lovisa
Holdings) A$40M; Shemara Wikramanayake (Macquarie Group) A$30M; Greg Goodman
(Goodman Group) A$27M; Mick Farrell (ResMed) A$20M; Mike Henry (BHP) A$19M.
|
MSNBC
Trump’s key actions in week to 4 June 2025
Said a reporter’s question about the Wall Street joke “Trump
Always Chickens Out” (TACO) on his proposed tariffs was “nasty.”
Had sweeping tariffs blocked by a three-judge panel on the
U.S. Court of International Trade, though an appeals court later paused the
block.
Called Leonard Leo, the influential former chair of the
conservative Federalist Society, a “sleazebag” who “probably hates America.”
Said that people should not feel bad for Joe Biden for
having prostate cancer and shared a social media post claiming he was replaced
by a robotic clone.
MSNBC Trump’s key actions in week to 25 June 2025
Dropped an f-bomb when responding to reporters about Iran
and Israel accusing each other of violating a ceasefire.
Rescinded a rule that blocked logging and road construction
on 58 million acres of national forest lands.
Called for a special prosecutor to investigate his baseless
claims that the 2020 election was stolen.
Posted on social media during Juneteenth that there are “too
many non-working holidays in America.”
......
That's it for this post.
Best wishes, stay healthy and keep smiling.
Vera & Alex Olah
Caloundra Australia
Monday 30 June 2025.