A major outage in the mobile network of telecommunications provider Telstra disrupted large parts of Australia, affecting train services, air travel, emergency calls, and payment systems. The western city of Perth was particularly impacted, with hundreds of workers in the mining industry facing delays on FIFO flights to remote mine sites. Regional trains in Victoria came to a complete halt, and other regional connections were also affected. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese expressed concern over the disruption's impact on people across the country. Payment platforms also failed, preventing customers from paying for purchases or taxi rides. Telstra apologized to customers, stating the cause was a synchronization error in the mobile network system, and there were no indications of a cyberattack. Network issues were resolved after the outage, according to Telstra’s finance chief Michael Ackland. Communications Minister Anika Wels noted that the telecommunications sector has the least trust among Australians, emphasizing that it now falls to Telstra to restore confidence. The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has launched an investigation into the incident. Last year,
Tendenz-Einschätzung (Mitte): The article provides a balanced account of the technical failure, quoting both Telstra and government officials. It includes statements from the prime minister and communications minister but does not exhibit overtly biased language or selective sourcing.

