Angus Taylor, the new Liberal leader in Australia, said he has not seen the immigration plan leaked on Monday. The plan, developed by former leader Sussan Ley, proposed banning migrants from parts of 13 countries and speeding up removal of 100,000 asylum seekers and student visa holders. On ABC’s 7.30 program, Taylor said, "Frankly, I don’t know what the document is. I don’t know where it’s come from, and I don’t know what’s in it." Taylor added the new immigration policy will be made with his shadow cabinet soon but shared no details beyond his earlier statements. When asked about social media checks, he said intelligence agencies "need to be looking at this very very closely," especially for migrants from high-risk regions. He clarified, "That doesn’t mean you necessarily shut the door on those places, but it does mean, you do the work to make sure the people who are coming are not people who are going to threaten our way of life, and bring violence to our country." Taylor has also been warned by party leaders not to copy Donald Trump’s harsh border policies. In another important update, the Australian Human Rights Commission has released a report calling racism "systemic" in universities. Race Discrimination Commissioner Giridharan Sivaraman said the findings are "deeply troubling" and highlighted seven in ten students and staff experienced indirect racism. This rises to nine in ten among Palestinian and Jewish groups. The study surveyed 76,000 people and found some 15% faced direct racism. Only 6% reported incidents due to fear and distrust of university systems. The report offers 47 recommendations for governments and universities, including a national anti-racism framework, improved accountability, and workforce diversity. Sivaraman said, "We cannot wait any longer as racism continues to impact the lives of many in visceral ways." Meanwhile, 34 Australian women and children recently released from a Kurdish camp in Syria were denied return to Australia and sent back to the camp.