Mastermind of Aus 2032 Olympics lands massive payday in host city
The woman who landed Australia it's next Olympics, former state premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, has secured a massive payday in the River City.
Ms Palaszczuk who resigned as Queensland premier in December 2023 sold her clifftop Seventeen Mile Rocks home in the future host city less than a month after it hit the market – securing a 684 per cent hike in value in two decades.
Inside slumlord's crumbling empire: derelict, unliveable, worth millions
She'd bought the property for $260,000 in 2005 building a house there in 2006 which has now sold for $1.78m – which was $10,000 above the highest valuation estimate.
Homes there can fetch in the region of $826 to $1100 a week, according to property records.
The median house price of Seventeen Mile Rocks is $1.075m after 69.3 per cent in the past five years alone.
The ex-premier now has one property remaining publicly listed in her name in Queensland, a one-bedroom unit in Main Beach on the Gold Coast bought in June 2019 for $705,000.
Ms Palaszczuk took over the seat of Inala from her father Heinrich Palaszczuk after he retired in 2006. He was a minister in Queensland's Beattie government,
Saeed Moghaddam of Brisbane Real Estate Chapel Hill sold the Seventeen Mile Rocks property as an 'insider's secret'.
'You'll spot the lorikeets before you hear them, they love the tropical gardens out front,' his listing said. 'And if you're up early enough, you might even catch the mist rising over the ridge as you walk the trail to Riverside Park.'
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ABC News
2 hours ago
- ABC News
Victorian Liberal leader Brad Battin says party infighting is over as focus shifts to 2026 election
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SBS Australia
2 hours ago
- SBS Australia
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SBS Australia
2 hours ago
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Australian-run programs in the Indo-Pacific region were hardest hit, with $113 million worth of funding lost in the Pacific, closely followed by $111 million in Southeast Asia. But the impact for Australian agencies extends throughout Africa, the Middle East, and Asia. The report found a specific program assisting 765,000 people in Yemen was discontinued. "It was providing life-saving medicine. It was providing life-saving food, and it was providing malnutrition help for 26,000 children under the age of five," Mackenzie said. In Nepal, a program supporting over 300 girls in attending school was also axed, according to the report. "That means that they're more exposed to modern slavery, to human trafficking, to forced child marriage," Mackenzie said. "The flow-on effects of these projects and their ability to break the cycle of poverty are really quite compounding." It is still unclear whether programs co-funded by both the Australian and US governments will proceed. "When that US funding was stripped back, that whole project now comes into question," Mackenzie said. "What I'm hearing, it's very hard to say at this early stage, but a lot of these projects are falling away now." The council found child-related programs, including those covering education, health, nutrition, and anti-child trafficking, were also significantly affected. The US government undertook a review during the initial 90-day pause to ensure only programs fully aligning with the president's foreign policy were funded by USAID. While aid organisations say they have been given little clarity by the administration as to why programs were cut, there is a belief that those focused on climate change and gender did not meet the administration's expectations. "I don't think there was much thinking gone into it, to be quite honest," O'Toole said. "Anything that had the word gender in it. Anything, possibly, even with the words peace building, was eliminated, we believe, pretty quickly. 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Mackenzie said the government should prioritise funding health, education, and nutrition programs over initiatives with "geostrategic imperatives". World Donald Trump US Government Share this with family and friends