Students warned about ‘manipulative’ tactics of Shincheonji church
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Morning Mail: the ‘doomsday cult’ on campus, US delivers ultimatum to Israel, Socceroos grab draw | The Guardian

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Universities have warned students about the recruitment tactics of South Korean Shincheonji Church of Jesus.
16/10/2024

Morning Mail: the ‘doomsday cult’ on campus, US delivers ultimatum to Israel, Socceroos grab draw

 

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Morning everyone. Universities have warned students not to fall for the “manipulative” recruitment tactics of the Shincheonji church – a Korean religious sect that former members describe as a cult, and which is increasingly active on Australian campuses.

The federal government is stepping up its crackdown on consumer rorts with “dynamic ticket pricing” and other dodgy practices in the crosshairs; the US has delivered an ultimatum to Israel over Gaza aid; and the Socceroos win a priceless point in Japan. Plus: why did Donald Trump dance for 40 minutes at his latest campaign rally?

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Australian Catholic University.

Bree’s sister Anna has been involved for several years with Australian branches of the Shincheonji church – which former members describe as a “doomsday cult”. She says her sister, who was recruited by the group at university but has since dropped out, spends most of her waking hours on church activities, often not returning home until after midnight. “She’s so tired that she’s doing stuff like burning food,” Bree told Guardian Australia. “She’s been in a collision with other vehicles in two incidents.”

Several universities such as ACU have recently warned students to be wary of the “secretive” and “manipulative” recruitment tactics used by members of the church on campus. The Australian branch of Shincheonji did not respond to questions from Guardian Australia, but international chapters have previously denied the church is a cult.

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Socceroos | Australia scrapped their way to a 1-1 draw with Japan in Saitama last night to keep their hopes of qualifying for World Cup 2026 on track.

Cricket | England made a shock exit from the T20 World Cup after the West Indies handed them a six-wicket defeat. Meanwhile in the men’s game, a debut century by Kamran Ghulam’s gave Pakistan a boost as they aim to bounce back in the second test in Multain, ending day one on 259-5.

Football | The English FA is in advanced talks with Thomas Tuchel over appointing him as the next England manager.

Media roundup

A “witches’ brew” of preferences will decide the Melbourne council elections, the Age reports. The Australian Financial Review asks if Anthony Albanese’s house purchase might be his “Hawaii moment” in reference to his predecessor Scott Morrison’s much-criticised holiday decision. Michael Ferguson’s resignation as state treasurer indicates another shift of power in Tasmania’s parliament, analysis in the Mercury claims.

What’s happening today

Economy | Reserve Bank assistant governor Sarah Hunter to deliver a speech at in Sydney at 9am.

Canberra | National Press Club address by Australian Border Force commissioner Michael Outram.

Queensland | State election leaders’ debate at 1pm.

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