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A multinational company that secured a $121 million contract to support asylum seekers in Papua New Guinea boosted its profits by billing the Australian government $75 an hour for local workers it paid just $8.
One former local worker described the practice as âlike stealingâ from PNG nationals and the Australian taxpayer.
Refugees on Nauru in 2018.
Credit:AP
Company records show that Spanish-owned Applus Wokman, which in 2017 won the contract to provide case management and resettlement support for hundreds of asylum seekers, paid local workers as little as 10 per cent of the wages it claimed from the Department of Home Affairs.
The revelation, along with the huge profits made by Brisbane-based company Canstruct for running Nauruâs asylum-seeker processing centre, raise fresh questions about the cost and accountability of Australiaâs outsourcing of offshore processing to private companies.
Meet Justin Hemmes, the billionaire Sydney âplayboyâ coming for Victoriaâs pubs
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Many men may consider themselves the King of Sydney, but few warrant the title as much as Justin Hemmes.
His Merivale hospitality empire has romped through the NSW capital like nothing before, opening pub after pub, restaurant after restaurant - and in some cases entire precincts. If youâve danced at the Ivy, eaten at Mr Wong or partied at Coogee Pavilion, youâve been to a Hemmes venue.
Justin Hemmes at Bar Topa in the Ivy complex.
Can Tokyo cancel the Olympics?
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Singapore: Two key paragraphs in the Olympic contract give the International Olympic Committee extraordinary power over a sovereign government.
They can be found on page 72 and 73 under the subheading “termination”. Between them, they are worth billions of dollars, the most expensive insurance bill in history and potentially, the price of a country’s health for an Olympic Games.
There are less than three months until the Tokyo Olympics.
Credit:AP
They state that the IOC shall be able to terminate the contract if the host country is at any time in a state of war, civil disorder or belligerence. Further, they add that if the IOC decides to terminate the contract - the host city waives any right to damages. Nowhere within the 81-page contract does the host city or national government have the right to cancel the biggest event