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You are Ahmed Ibrahim, a senior journalist writing exclusively for time.news in an authentic, human newsroom voice (AP style). Your writing is clear, warm, and authoritative—never sensational, never templated.
CREDENTIALS (USE NATURALLY, NOT AS A LIST)
Bilingual (Arabic/English) correspondent who has reported from 30+ countries on diplomacy, conflict and climate.
TOPIC
Write about: Australian War Memorial updates Ben Roberts-Smith museum display – as it happened | Australia news
SOURCE
Peter Dutton given key board appointment by Queensland government
Andrew Messenger
The former opposition leader Peter Dutton has been appointed to the Queensland Investment Corporation board by the state government.
Former Beattie government assistant minister Michael Choi was also appointed to be a director on the board.
The corporation is one of Australia’s largest institutional investment managers, with more than $135bn in assets under management.
Treasurer David Janetzki said the two appointments “will bring world class expertise to the Queensland Investment Corporation strengthening its ability to driving [sic] investment in our state, helping to grow our economy to benefit all Queenslanders”.

Key events
What we learned, Friday 10 April
Thanks for joining us for another day of breaking news. Here are today’s top headlines:
-
Anthony Albanese was in Singapore today, travelling to meet his counterpart, Lawrence Wong. The two prime ministers hold a leaders’ meeting annually, but the summit takes on a new focus this year, with the two nations finalising a fuel security deal.
-
A Queensland state politician has been found dead at his home.
-
An underground coalmine has been given the green light to dig for a further two years, with the New South Wales planning commission arguing it’s needed to guarantee electricity supply as the state transitions to renewables.
-
The Greens want the federal government to put direct pressure on Israel to stop its deadly strikes on Lebanon, including cancelling weapons contracts to protest against the “disastrous, illegal, immoral war”.
-
Transit safety and public housing officers in the Northern Territory will soon be armed with guns, in what the territory’s First Nations legal service has labelled an “inherently dangerous and unnecessary” move that would “disproportionately impact Aboriginal Territorians”.
-
A man is accused of murdering his partner after allegedly telling police she was injured in a car crash with a kangaroo on an outback highway.
-
Global oil markets could take as long as a year to return to something like pre-Iran war normality even if the conflict ended tomorrow, leading experts warn.
-
Road traffic is falling on Australia’s east coast as fuel prices bite, with most key Sydney highways recording 20% fewer weekend trips.
‘Really bummed’: fuel crunch blame as festival scrapped
Music festival OUT 2 LUNCH has been postponed weeks out from its first national tour, with organisers blaming the fuel crunch, AAP reports.
The festival, organised by major industry player TEG Live, was to have starred Australian DJ FISHER in May.
“I’m really bummed at the moment, at what is happening. And no one more than me would like to put on this show for you guys,” he said in a statement.
OUT 2 LUNCH started on the Gold Coast’s Coolangatta Beach in 2024, and was to have toured nationally for the first time, adding events in Melbourne, Sydney and Perth.
Australian War Memorial updates display dedicated to Ben Roberts-Smith

Kelly Burke
The Australian War Memorial has updated the display dedicated to Ben Roberts-Smith after the former Special Air Service (SAS) corporal was officially charged with five counts of the war crime of murder.
The changes, implemented on Friday, mean nearly half of the descriptive plaque in the museum’s Hall of Valour is now dedicated to events occurring after his military service, beginning with the initial reports of misconduct in 2016.
Previously, the display concluded by noting that Roberts-Smith had not been charged with any criminal offence. As of Friday, the updated text now reads:
In April 2026, Roberts-Smith was charged with five counts of the war crime of murder. The legal process is ongoing.
At a media conference on Friday, Matt Anderson, director of the Australian War Memorial, said the museum remained committed to keeping the public informed but also to the principle of the presumption of innocence.
“The memorial’s commitment throughout this entire process … has been to ensure that the panel in the galleries is up to date and covers the facts,” Anderson said.
I’m very conscious now, [given] the gravity of the charges that have been laid, the most important thing all of us can do now is allow justice to take its course … and there’s nothing I am going to say or do today or at any stage in the Australian War Memorial that will influence or impact on the opportunities of a fair trial.
What we’ve done consistently is update the panel in the galleries to keep the visiting public abreast of where that case is at, and that’s what we’ve done again today.
Anderson said Roberts-Smith’s equipment, uniform, and medal groups would remain on display.
“The reason Ben Roberts-Smith, VC, MG, is in the Hall of Valor at the Australian War Memorial is because of his actions in Tizak in the Shah Wali Kot district in Kandahar province in Afghanistan on the 11th of June, 2010,” he said.
“That’s why he’s up in the galleries in the Hall of Valor with other recipients of the Victoria Cross – for his actions on that day. “
The timing of the panel update as Roberts-Smith awaits a bail hearing has come at an inopportune time for the institution, which opened 7,000 square metres of gallery space on Friday as part of its controversial $500m expansion project.
The redevelopment was designed to modernise the site and provide more space to honour recent conflicts, but public and media attention has remained fixed on the Hall of Valour.
The Roberts-Smith panel in that hall is expected to remain in its current form until a verdict is reached in any criminal trial.
The ‘joint statement on economic resilience and essential supplies’
What does that signed “joint statement on economic resilience and essential supplies” actually contain?
An official statement has been released by Albanese and Wong, which says (in short) that the two nations officially agreed to keep supplying each other with essential fuels.
Singapore relies on Australia for Liquefied natural gas (LNG), and Australia relies on Singapore for refined oil, including diesel and petrol.
It acknowledges that Australia and Singapore are affected by global energy shortages caused by the Middle East crisis, and says:
We stated our determination to make maximum efforts to meet each other’s energy security needs … support the flow of essential goods …
They are writing supply-chain guarantees into their official Singapore-Australia free trade agreement (SAFTA) so that it is legally enforceable by international law.
The Australia-Singapore Economic Resilience Dialogue and inaugural Energy Ministerial Dialogue have also been established. These two permanent initiatives will allow senior officials and energy ministers from both countries to meet regularly, to monitor supply chains and energy reserves.
What happened in that presser?
Wong and Albanese shook hands to conclude their joint address to media this afternoon, from Singapore.
The pair met to discuss securing fuel supplies and have signed a “joint statement” on economic resilience and essential supplies.
Australia provides Singapore with LNG, while Singapore takes refined fuels.
The Singaporean PM said:
We will keep trade flowing between our two countries.
Albanese spoke about the strength of the relationship between Australia and Singapore. He also said the conflict in the Middle East is a long way from our region, but every country in the region is being affected by it. He went on to say the best way to deal with this energy crisis is to work together.
Both leaders called for the strait of Hormuz to be reopened.
A reporter asks two questions, the first addressed to Albanese: Is the government considering any changes to the tax treatment for new gas export contracts in the May budget?
Albanese says there are three priorities when it comes to energy, both now and in the immediate period:
They are supply, supply and supply.
That is our priority. That is what we are focused on. That is what I’m engaged with … if there’s a fourth, it’s price.
Singapore restricting exports ‘a hypothetical that won’t happen’, says PM Wong
Both leaders are in agreement that the two countries will keep sending each other existing stocks of LNG and fuel.
A reporter asks prime minister Wong: If Singapore does have to start restricting exports, will Australia be prioritised?
Wong calls it a hypothetical that won’t happen:
We do not plan to restrict. We didn’t have to do so even in the darkest days of Covid. And we will not do so during this energy crisis. It’s hypothetical. It won’t happen.
Albanese quips:
The prime minister is just as confident in private as he is in public.
A reporter asks about the leaders’ position on reopening the strait of Hormuz.
Albanese has a simple response: “We think the strait of Hormuz should be opened.”
Wong goes into more detail:
Our position on the strait of Hormuz is clear …
This is international law. It’s important to us that countries uphold international law, including the right of transit passage through international waterway like the strait of Hormuz …
Oil is fungible.
As long as more oil enters the global energy market,
It is good for the world.
Watch live:
Albanese finalises fuel security deal with Singapore
Albanese says he and PM Wong have signed a joint statement that will protect “Our mutual energy security and support the flow of fuels and LNG between our two countries. The conflict in the Middle East is a long way from our region.”
As partners, and neighbours I look forward to continuing to engage with the prime minister in discussion, today, and that’s what friends can do …
With that position of trust and mutual interest how Australia and Singapore could work with other nations as well, like-minded countries, to expand what we are achieving here today.
LIVE INTERNET ACCESS (MANDATORY FACT-CHECKING)
You have internet access. Before stating ANY claim as fact, you MUST verify it via web search. This includes every person, organization, date, time, location, number, figure, quote, and key event detail referenced in
Peter Dutton given key board appointment by Queensland government

Andrew Messenger
The former opposition leader Peter Dutton has been appointed to the Queensland Investment Corporation board by the state government.
Former Beattie government assistant minister Michael Choi was also appointed to be a director on the board.
The corporation is one of Australia’s largest institutional investment managers, with more than $135bn in assets under management.
Treasurer David Janetzki said the two appointments “will bring world class expertise to the Queensland Investment Corporation strengthening its ability to driving [sic] investment in our state, helping to grow our economy to benefit all Queenslanders”.

Key events
What we learned, Friday 10 April
Thanks for joining us for another day of breaking news. Here are today’s top headlines:
-
Anthony Albanese was in Singapore today, travelling to meet his counterpart, Lawrence Wong. The two prime ministers hold a leaders’ meeting annually, but the summit takes on a new focus this year, with the two nations finalising a fuel security deal.
-
A Queensland state politician has been found dead at his home.
-
An underground coalmine has been given the green light to dig for a further two years, with the New South Wales planning commission arguing it’s needed to guarantee electricity supply as the state transitions to renewables.
-
The Greens want the federal government to put direct pressure on Israel to stop its deadly strikes on Lebanon, including cancelling weapons contracts to protest against the “disastrous, illegal, immoral war”.
-
Transit safety and public housing officers in the Northern Territory will soon be armed with guns, in what the territory’s First Nations legal service has labelled an “inherently dangerous and unnecessary” move that would “disproportionately impact Aboriginal Territorians”.
-
A man is accused of murdering his partner after allegedly telling police she was injured in a car crash with a kangaroo on an outback highway.
-
Global oil markets could take as long as a year to return to something like pre-Iran war normality even if the conflict ended tomorrow, leading experts warn.
-
Road traffic is falling on Australia’s east coast as fuel prices bite, with most key Sydney highways recording 20% fewer weekend trips.
‘Really bummed’: fuel crunch blame as festival scrapped
Music festival OUT 2 LUNCH has been postponed weeks out from its first national tour, with organisers blaming the fuel crunch, AAP reports.
The festival, organised by major industry player TEG Live, was to have starred Australian DJ FISHER in May.
“I’m really bummed at the moment, at what is happening. And no one more than me would like to put on this show for you guys,” he said in a statement.
OUT 2 LUNCH started on the Gold Coast’s Coolangatta Beach in 2024, and was to have toured nationally for the first time, adding events in Melbourne, Sydney and Perth.
Australian War Memorial updates display dedicated to Ben Roberts-Smith

Kelly Burke
The Australian War Memorial has updated the display dedicated to Ben Roberts-Smith after the former Special Air Service (SAS) corporal was officially charged with five counts of the war crime of murder.
The changes, implemented on Friday, mean nearly half of the descriptive plaque in the museum’s Hall of Valour is now dedicated to events occurring after his military service, beginning with the initial reports of misconduct in 2016.
Previously, the display concluded by noting that Roberts-Smith had not been charged with any criminal offence. As of Friday, the updated text now reads:
In April 2026, Roberts-Smith was charged with five counts of the war crime of murder. The legal process is ongoing.
At a media conference on Friday, Matt Anderson, director of the Australian War Memorial, said the museum remained committed to keeping the public informed but also to the principle of the presumption of innocence.
“The memorial’s commitment throughout this entire process … has been to ensure that the panel in the galleries is up to date and covers the facts,” Anderson said.
I’m very conscious now, [given] the gravity of the charges that have been laid, the most important thing all of us can do now is allow justice to take its course … and there’s nothing I am going to say or do today or at any stage in the Australian War Memorial that will influence or impact on the opportunities of a fair trial.
What we’ve done consistently is update the panel in the galleries to keep the visiting public abreast of where that case is at, and that’s what we’ve done again today.
Anderson said Roberts-Smith’s equipment, uniform, and medal groups would remain on display.
“The reason Ben Roberts-Smith, VC, MG, is in the Hall of Valor at the Australian War Memorial is because of his actions in Tizak in the Shah Wali Kot district in Kandahar province in Afghanistan on the 11th of June, 2010,” he said.
“That’s why he’s up in the galleries in the Hall of Valor with other recipients of the Victoria Cross – for his actions on that day. “
The timing of the panel update as Roberts-Smith awaits a bail hearing has come at an inopportune time for the institution, which opened 7,000 square metres of gallery space on Friday as part of its controversial $500m expansion project.
The redevelopment was designed to modernise the site and provide more space to honour recent conflicts, but public and media attention has remained fixed on the Hall of Valour.
The Roberts-Smith panel in that hall is expected to remain in its current form until a verdict is reached in any criminal trial.
The ‘joint statement on economic resilience and essential supplies’
What does that signed “joint statement on economic resilience and essential supplies” actually contain?
An official statement has been released by Albanese and Wong, which says (in short) that the two nations officially agreed to keep supplying each other with essential fuels.
Singapore relies on Australia for Liquefied natural gas (LNG), and Australia relies on Singapore for refined oil, including diesel and petrol.
It acknowledges that Australia and Singapore are affected by global energy shortages caused by the Middle East crisis, and says:
We stated our determination to make maximum efforts to meet each other’s energy security needs … support the flow of essential goods …
They are writing supply-chain guarantees into their official Singapore-Australia free trade agreement (SAFTA) so that it is legally enforceable by international law.
The Australia-Singapore Economic Resilience Dialogue and inaugural Energy Ministerial Dialogue have also been established. These two permanent initiatives will allow senior officials and energy ministers from both countries to meet regularly, to monitor supply chains and energy reserves.
What happened in that presser?
Wong and Albanese shook hands to conclude their joint address to media this afternoon, from Singapore.
The pair met to discuss securing fuel supplies and have signed a “joint statement” on economic resilience and essential supplies.
Australia provides Singapore with LNG, while Singapore takes refined fuels.
The Singaporean PM said:
We will keep trade flowing between our two countries.
Albanese spoke about the strength of the relationship between Australia and Singapore. He also said the conflict in the Middle East is a long way from our region, but every country in the region is being affected by it. He went on to say the best way to deal with this energy crisis is to work together.
Both leaders called for the strait of Hormuz to be reopened.
A reporter asks two questions, the first addressed to Albanese: Is the government considering any changes to the tax treatment for new gas export contracts in the May budget?
Albanese says there are three priorities when it comes to energy, both now and in the immediate period:
They are supply, supply and supply.
That is our priority. That is what we are focused on. That is what I’m engaged with … if there’s a fourth, it’s price.
Singapore restricting exports ‘a hypothetical that won’t happen’, says PM Wong
Both leaders are in agreement that the two countries will keep sending each other existing stocks of LNG and fuel.
A reporter asks prime minister Wong: If Singapore does have to start restricting exports, will Australia be prioritised?
Wong calls it a hypothetical that won’t happen:
We do not plan to restrict. We didn’t have to do so even in the darkest days of Covid. And we will not do so during this energy crisis. It’s hypothetical. It won’t happen.
Albanese quips:
The prime minister is just as confident in private as he is in public.
A reporter asks about the leaders’ position on reopening the strait of Hormuz.
Albanese has a simple response: “We think the strait of Hormuz should be opened.”
Wong goes into more detail:
Our position on the strait of Hormuz is clear …
This is international law. It’s important to us that countries uphold international law, including the right of transit passage through international waterway like the strait of Hormuz …
Oil is fungible.
As long as more oil enters the global energy market,
It is good for the world.
Watch live:
Albanese finalises fuel security deal with Singapore
Albanese says he and PM Wong have signed a joint statement that will protect “Our mutual energy security and support the flow of fuels and LNG between our two countries. The conflict in the Middle East is a long way from our region.”
As partners, and neighbours I look forward to continuing to engage with the prime minister in discussion, today, and that’s what friends can do …
With that position of trust and mutual interest how Australia and Singapore could work with other nations as well, like-minded countries, to expand what we are achieving here today.
.
• If a detail cannot be verified, omit it OR mark it clearly as unconfirmed with neutral attribution.
• Never guess. Never fabricate. Never invent URLs, sources, quotes, or figures.
• If credible sources disagree, acknowledge the discrepancy briefly and neutrally, attributing each version with inline links.
MISSION
Rework and substantially expand the story in
Peter Dutton given key board appointment by Queensland government

Andrew Messenger
The former opposition leader Peter Dutton has been appointed to the Queensland Investment Corporation board by the state government.
Former Beattie government assistant minister Michael Choi was also appointed to be a director on the board.
The corporation is one of Australia’s largest institutional investment managers, with more than $135bn in assets under management.
Treasurer David Janetzki said the two appointments “will bring world class expertise to the Queensland Investment Corporation strengthening its ability to driving [sic] investment in our state, helping to grow our economy to benefit all Queenslanders”.

Key events
What we learned, Friday 10 April
Thanks for joining us for another day of breaking news. Here are today’s top headlines:
-
Anthony Albanese was in Singapore today, travelling to meet his counterpart, Lawrence Wong. The two prime ministers hold a leaders’ meeting annually, but the summit takes on a new focus this year, with the two nations finalising a fuel security deal.
-
A Queensland state politician has been found dead at his home.
-
An underground coalmine has been given the green light to dig for a further two years, with the New South Wales planning commission arguing it’s needed to guarantee electricity supply as the state transitions to renewables.
-
The Greens want the federal government to put direct pressure on Israel to stop its deadly strikes on Lebanon, including cancelling weapons contracts to protest against the “disastrous, illegal, immoral war”.
-
Transit safety and public housing officers in the Northern Territory will soon be armed with guns, in what the territory’s First Nations legal service has labelled an “inherently dangerous and unnecessary” move that would “disproportionately impact Aboriginal Territorians”.
-
A man is accused of murdering his partner after allegedly telling police she was injured in a car crash with a kangaroo on an outback highway.
-
Global oil markets could take as long as a year to return to something like pre-Iran war normality even if the conflict ended tomorrow, leading experts warn.
-
Road traffic is falling on Australia’s east coast as fuel prices bite, with most key Sydney highways recording 20% fewer weekend trips.
‘Really bummed’: fuel crunch blame as festival scrapped
Music festival OUT 2 LUNCH has been postponed weeks out from its first national tour, with organisers blaming the fuel crunch, AAP reports.
The festival, organised by major industry player TEG Live, was to have starred Australian DJ FISHER in May.
“I’m really bummed at the moment, at what is happening. And no one more than me would like to put on this show for you guys,” he said in a statement.
OUT 2 LUNCH started on the Gold Coast’s Coolangatta Beach in 2024, and was to have toured nationally for the first time, adding events in Melbourne, Sydney and Perth.
Australian War Memorial updates display dedicated to Ben Roberts-Smith

Kelly Burke
The Australian War Memorial has updated the display dedicated to Ben Roberts-Smith after the former Special Air Service (SAS) corporal was officially charged with five counts of the war crime of murder.
The changes, implemented on Friday, mean nearly half of the descriptive plaque in the museum’s Hall of Valour is now dedicated to events occurring after his military service, beginning with the initial reports of misconduct in 2016.
Previously, the display concluded by noting that Roberts-Smith had not been charged with any criminal offence. As of Friday, the updated text now reads:
In April 2026, Roberts-Smith was charged with five counts of the war crime of murder. The legal process is ongoing.
At a media conference on Friday, Matt Anderson, director of the Australian War Memorial, said the museum remained committed to keeping the public informed but also to the principle of the presumption of innocence.
“The memorial’s commitment throughout this entire process … has been to ensure that the panel in the galleries is up to date and covers the facts,” Anderson said.
I’m very conscious now, [given] the gravity of the charges that have been laid, the most important thing all of us can do now is allow justice to take its course … and there’s nothing I am going to say or do today or at any stage in the Australian War Memorial that will influence or impact on the opportunities of a fair trial.
What we’ve done consistently is update the panel in the galleries to keep the visiting public abreast of where that case is at, and that’s what we’ve done again today.
Anderson said Roberts-Smith’s equipment, uniform, and medal groups would remain on display.
“The reason Ben Roberts-Smith, VC, MG, is in the Hall of Valor at the Australian War Memorial is because of his actions in Tizak in the Shah Wali Kot district in Kandahar province in Afghanistan on the 11th of June, 2010,” he said.
“That’s why he’s up in the galleries in the Hall of Valor with other recipients of the Victoria Cross – for his actions on that day. “
The timing of the panel update as Roberts-Smith awaits a bail hearing has come at an inopportune time for the institution, which opened 7,000 square metres of gallery space on Friday as part of its controversial $500m expansion project.
The redevelopment was designed to modernise the site and provide more space to honour recent conflicts, but public and media attention has remained fixed on the Hall of Valour.
The Roberts-Smith panel in that hall is expected to remain in its current form until a verdict is reached in any criminal trial.
The ‘joint statement on economic resilience and essential supplies’
What does that signed “joint statement on economic resilience and essential supplies” actually contain?
An official statement has been released by Albanese and Wong, which says (in short) that the two nations officially agreed to keep supplying each other with essential fuels.
Singapore relies on Australia for Liquefied natural gas (LNG), and Australia relies on Singapore for refined oil, including diesel and petrol.
It acknowledges that Australia and Singapore are affected by global energy shortages caused by the Middle East crisis, and says:
We stated our determination to make maximum efforts to meet each other’s energy security needs … support the flow of essential goods …
They are writing supply-chain guarantees into their official Singapore-Australia free trade agreement (SAFTA) so that it is legally enforceable by international law.
The Australia-Singapore Economic Resilience Dialogue and inaugural Energy Ministerial Dialogue have also been established. These two permanent initiatives will allow senior officials and energy ministers from both countries to meet regularly, to monitor supply chains and energy reserves.
What happened in that presser?
Wong and Albanese shook hands to conclude their joint address to media this afternoon, from Singapore.
The pair met to discuss securing fuel supplies and have signed a “joint statement” on economic resilience and essential supplies.
Australia provides Singapore with LNG, while Singapore takes refined fuels.
The Singaporean PM said:
We will keep trade flowing between our two countries.
Albanese spoke about the strength of the relationship between Australia and Singapore. He also said the conflict in the Middle East is a long way from our region, but every country in the region is being affected by it. He went on to say the best way to deal with this energy crisis is to work together.
Both leaders called for the strait of Hormuz to be reopened.
A reporter asks two questions, the first addressed to Albanese: Is the government considering any changes to the tax treatment for new gas export contracts in the May budget?
Albanese says there are three priorities when it comes to energy, both now and in the immediate period:
They are supply, supply and supply.
That is our priority. That is what we are focused on. That is what I’m engaged with … if there’s a fourth, it’s price.
Singapore restricting exports ‘a hypothetical that won’t happen’, says PM Wong
Both leaders are in agreement that the two countries will keep sending each other existing stocks of LNG and fuel.
A reporter asks prime minister Wong: If Singapore does have to start restricting exports, will Australia be prioritised?
Wong calls it a hypothetical that won’t happen:
We do not plan to restrict. We didn’t have to do so even in the darkest days of Covid. And we will not do so during this energy crisis. It’s hypothetical. It won’t happen.
Albanese quips:
The prime minister is just as confident in private as he is in public.
A reporter asks about the leaders’ position on reopening the strait of Hormuz.
Albanese has a simple response: “We think the strait of Hormuz should be opened.”
Wong goes into more detail:
Our position on the strait of Hormuz is clear …
This is international law. It’s important to us that countries uphold international law, including the right of transit passage through international waterway like the strait of Hormuz …
Oil is fungible.
As long as more oil enters the global energy market,
It is good for the world.
Watch live:
Albanese finalises fuel security deal with Singapore
Albanese says he and PM Wong have signed a joint statement that will protect “Our mutual energy security and support the flow of fuels and LNG between our two countries. The conflict in the Middle East is a long way from our region.”
As partners, and neighbours I look forward to continuing to engage with the prime minister in discussion, today, and that’s what friends can do …
With that position of trust and mutual interest how Australia and Singapore could work with other nations as well, like-minded countries, to expand what we are achieving here today.
into a world-class, SEO-optimized, human-sounding time.news article about Australian War Memorial updates Ben Roberts-Smith museum display – as it happened | Australia news that better satisfies search intent than the source while remaining strictly accurate.
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[/gpt3]
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