Sky News host Paul Murray says Queensland’s “heartless, dangerously stupid premier” and the “nasty public health bureaucrats” are denying a dying man from being able to have his children hold his hand before he dies.
Mark Keanes, a father suffering from terminal cancer in Brisbane, has family and children in NSW who are seeking to visit their dad one last time, however Queensland Health has made this difficult, telling the family to choose one
child to send up to say goodbye. “This is not about a bunch of people who want to go and relive schoolies,” Mr Murray said. “This about people who deserve the right to hold the hand of their dad before he dies.” Image: News Corp Australia
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Andrews is ‘living in a completely different world’: Murray | Sky News AustraliaSky News host Paul Murray says Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews is living in a different world and has lied yet again after it was discovered the state’s curfew laws were not medically advised.\n\nIn an exchange between Victoria’s Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton and Neil Mitchell on radio station 3AW, Professor Sutton revealed the curfew in the state wasn’t based on his advice.\n\n“Daniel Andrews has been caught lying again,” Mr Murray said.\n\n“You’re kidding me … the chief medical officer who is apparently the one who has been pulling the strings wasn’t pulling the strings when it came to the curfew.\n\n“Who is the health bureaucrat who outranks the chief medical officer, the answer is no-one.\n\n“It’s insane … Andrews is just living in a completely different world.”\n
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Australia must 'normalise' relations with China without 'trading away' core values | Sky News AustraliaLiberal Senator Andrew Bragg says it is 'very troubling' to hear Australia no longer has any correspondents in China following the rushed removal of two Australian journalists over fears for their safety.\n\nJournalists Bill Birtles and Michael Smith landed in Sydney yesterday after being evacuated from China by the Department of Foreign Affairs after Chinese authorities demanded they present themselves for questioning in relation to Cheng Lei, an Australian journalist who was detained in Beijing last month. \n\nMr Bragg told Sky News it was a “regrettable” situation but he looked forward “to the normalisation of relations over the medium term”. \n\n“I don’t think it’s a very good look to have effectively expelled Australian journalists,” he said. \n\n“Not only does it deprive us of real media, real intelligence on what’s happening on the ground but it also is a bit of a vote of no confidence in our day-to-day engagement.”\n\nWhen asked whether it would be a good move for Australia to begin expelling Chinese diplomats from the country, Mr Bragg said they would be hard-pressed to find the government “stooping to use those sorts of tactics”. \n\n“We don’t engage in censorship in this country,” he said. \n\n“The reality is, China is an important country to Australia, it will be important to our future and we need to focus on normalising relations over the medium term without trading away any of the values that we hold dear.” \n\nImage: Getty
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Communist China 'putting Australia in a new category' amid deteriorating relations | Sky News AustraliaThe Communist Party of China may have decided to 'take Australia out of one category of countries that it deals with' as the bilateral relationship between the two nations continues to deteriorate says Melbourne University Professor Michael Wesley. \n\nAustralia no longer has any correspondents in China following the rushed removal of two Australian journalists over fears for their safety.\n\nProfessor Wesley said if the strategic partnership isn't dead between the two nations, 'it's certainly on life support'. \n\n'It's hard to tell at this stage whether this is another step in a slow tightening of the pressure on Australia by Beijing,' Professor Wesley said. \n\n'Or whether China has simply decided to take Australia out of one category of countries that it deals with, which up until five or six years ago was seen to be a relatively friendly country to China, and simply put it in another category. \n\n'That is a country that China will deal with on a pragmatic basis but with no pretense of any closeness and no favours done on either side.' \n\n'It's certainly starting to look like the latter of those to me,' he said. \n\n'It is very hard to see how the bilateral relationship is going to return to a level of, let's say pre-2012 where there were close and cordial relations between the Australian and Chinese governments'. \n\nImage: News Corp Australia
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Australia doesn't know 'China's new rules nor what it'll do next' | Sky News AustraliaThe Australian’s Editor-at-Large Paul Kelly says the fact Australia doesn’t know what China will do next is debilitating and alarming. \n\nThe decision to rush out the last two Australian accredited journalists in China in recent days has raised serious questions about the way Australia manages relationship with its most significant trade partner, but also, 'its most significant regional security threat,' said Sky News host Peta Credlin.\n\n“I think we’re in a downward spiral in terms of the bilateral relationship (with China),” Mr Kelly said.\n\n“The really alarming aspect of all of this is that we don’t know what the new rules are.”\n\nMr Kelly said the fundamental question was: “how safe are Australians in China?”\n\n“If you look at the size of the business relationship, if you look at the scope of the people to people relationship, this is a really, really disturbing event,” he said. \n\n“The alarming thing about it is that people don’t know what China might do next.\n\n“That’s really debilitating.”\n\nImage: AP
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Chinese nationals banned from Australia over alleged espionage and interference | Sky News AustraliaTwo Chinese academics have reportedly had their visas revoked and at least two Chinese journalists forced to leave the country after being interviewed by ASIO over alleged foreign interference and espionage.\n\nThe move is believed to be linked to allegations NSW Labor MP Shaoquett Moselmane was the target of a foreign influence campaign.\n\nChina reported through its state-run media Chinese journalists in Australia had their homes raided by ASIO after two Australian reporters were effectively pushed out of China.\n\nChinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Zhao Lijian launched an attack on Australia's treatment of its journalists, accusing Australia of harassment.\n\n'We demand the Australian side immediately stop its brutal and rude acts, stop harassing and suppressing Chinese nationals in Australia under any excuses, Mr Zhao said.\n\n'Ensure the safety and legitimate rights and interests of Chinese citizens and stop doing anything that will deserve people-to-people and cultural exchanges between the two countries.'\n\nImage: Getty\n\n
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Virgin Australia scraps numerous regional routes | Sky News AustraliaVirgin Australia will scrap several regional routes as part of its post-coronavirus restructure. \n\nThe airline will stop offering flights from Sydney to Albury, Uluru, Hervey Bay and Port Macquarie. \n\nOther regional destinations to be phased out include Melbourne to Mildura and Mount Isa. \n\nAirline bosses said the routes were not commercially viable with anticipated demand. \n\nImage: News Corp Australia \n\n
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