Updated October 14th, 2019 at 21:45 IST

Australian PMO accidentally sends confidential document to journalists

The Australian Prime Minister's office accidentally sent a confidential document to a journalist instead of sending the document to its own coalition's MPs

Reported by: Sounak Mitra
| Image:self
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The Australian Prime Minister's office accidentally sent a confidential document to a journalist instead of sending the document to its own coalition's member of parliament (MP's). The thought behind the document was to set up the Australian government's Liberal-National Party alliance members for Monday's resumption of Parliament. Instead of sending the confidential talking points its own MPs, the confidential document was sent to journalists and media outlets present in the country including Xinhua.

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The arguments ask MPs to avoid and react

Tending to everything from an ascent in asylum seeker numbers, tax assessment, conflict in Syria, the Paris Agreement and Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, the email offered lawmakers vital responses to inquiries that might be posed by journalists and opposition party members. The 8,200-word document said that whenever got some information about the International Monetary Fund (IMF's) environmental change report which cases Australia may not meet it's 2030 objective, the arguments ask MPs to avoid and react by saying they will meet their objective without presenting a carbon tax.

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The email suggested the members of the party address fears of worker exploitation

In another part of the document, the email suggested the members of the party address fears of worker exploitation Down Under, after official statistics recently confirmed an all-time high number of asylum seekers have arrived in Australia by air for the past five years. The document said that Labour Party claim to be concerned about worker exploitation, yet when they were toward the end in government they decimated the Fair Work Ombudsman's funding by more than 20 million Australian (13.57 million U.S. dollars) dollars, cut their staff by 23 percent and had no arrangement to protect vulnerable workers. Prime Minister Scott Morrison is yet to comment on the matter. On the other hand, Attorney-General Christian Porter downplayed the gaffe telling international media that these types of things occur from time to time in the modern world of politics.

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(With inputs from agencies)

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Published October 14th, 2019 at 21:27 IST