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Randa Abdel-Fattah to appear at Sydney writers’ festival

Dr Randa Abdel-Fattah will appear in two sessions at this year’s Sydney writers’ festival, part of a program of about 200 events.

Brooke Webb, the chief executive officer of the festival, and Ann Mossop, its artistic director, said in a joint statement Abdel-Fattah is a “significant Sydney writer with a new book that speaks to the here and now”.

Sydney is a highly diverse city, and the Festival aims to reflect the many and varied communities of writers and readers in its program. That commitment to breadth and representation sits alongside national and international voices across fiction and non-fiction.

A festival like ours, which holds freedom of expression as a core value, is not in the business of cancelling or censoring writers. We think a writers festival provides a rare and welcome opportunity for readers and writers to come together for nuanced conversations about complex and sometimes difficult topics.

Readers can make up their own minds about what they would like to attend. Without writers, there is no festival.

Webb and Mossop added that they respected some may hold different views, saying the festival is “always” in conversation with major stakeholders, including government.

The 2026 event will release its full program on 10 March.

Abdel-Fattah was disinvited from Adelaide writers’ week earlier this year, prompting resignations and the event’s cancellation. A replacement board apologised to Abdel-Fattah and invited her to participate in the 2027 writers’ week.

Randa Abdel-Fattah.
Randa Abdel-Fattah. Photograph: Flavio Brancaleone/AAP
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Key events

Hanson ‘not fit to lead’ a political party, Matt Canavan says

Tom McIlroy

Tom McIlroy

Outspoken Nationals senator Matt Canavan has pushed back on Pauline Hanson’s increasingly inflammatory statements about Australian Muslims this week, saying she is not fit to lead a political party.

Hanson was on Sky News on Monday night, discussing the thwarted attempts by Australian women and children stuck in Syria to return home.

The One Nation leader said the group hated westerners, saying: “You know, you say, ‘oh, well, there’s good Muslims out there’. Well, I’m sorry, how can you … tell me there are good Muslims?”

Matt Canavan. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

Speaking on Channel 9 this morning, Canavan called remarks by his fellow Queensland senator “totally un-Australian”.

“This statement from Pauline was divisive, inflammatory,” he said, going on:

Totally un-Australian, for someone to say that of all those Australians who are Muslim, there’s no good people among them.

Clearly, I think she went too far, and now she won’t apologise because she doesn’t do that … She’s not fit to lead a major political party with these types of ill-disciplined statements that she won’t correct that insult [to] hundreds of thousands of Australians.

On ABC radio, Hanson walked back some of the comments on Wednesday, saying a Muslim candidate had run for her party, but refused to apologise.

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