Victorian outbreak keeping Australia in a ‘limbo land of suppression’ | Sky News Australia

Australia News News

Victorian outbreak keeping Australia in a ‘limbo land of suppression’ | Sky News Australia
Australia Latest News,Australia Headlines
  • 📰 SkyNewsAust
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 20 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 11%
  • Publisher: 78%

Australia must eliminate the virus in order to avoid living in a “limbo land of suppression” triggered by low levels of community transmission, according to Melbourne University epidemiologist Professor Tony Blakely.

Victoria has recorded another 165 coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours taking the state’s total active cases to just under 900, with 41 people currently in hospital. Mr Blakely said Victoria “did have low grade community transmissions so we were going to get the virus breaking out at some point”.

He said the outbreak had “been brought forward in time and with greater intensity because of the muck up with the quarantine whereby it leaked out through the security guards into the north-western suburbs”. “This is a really bad situation for Victoria which stands out like a sore thumb” while other states have successfully eliminated the virus, he told Sky News host Andrew Bolt.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

SkyNewsAust /  🏆 7. in AU

Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Victorian Health Department the new target of blame amid COVID-19 outbreak | Sky News AustraliaVictorian Health Department the new target of blame amid COVID-19 outbreak | Sky News AustraliaSky News contributor Caleb Bond says a lack of testing resources and bureaucrats with health training “points to a complete failure” by the Andrews government to manage the coronavirus pandemic within the state of Victoria.\n\nThe Australian is reporting a “shortage of public health professionals in the Victorian bureaucracy is being blamed for the second wave of COVID-19 cases sweeping Melbourne, with a lack of contact tracers and an inability to train them at scale leaving the state more vulnerable than if the transmissions had occurred in NSW.\n\nThe number of active infections in the state from an unknown source reached 456 on Wednesday.\n\nMr Bond said “the evidence is mounting that the reason that this has happened in Victoria is because Daniel Andrews and his government and his bureaucracy were not on top of cases”.\n\n“Daniel Andrews and his government created a second wave,” he told Sky News host Peter Gleeson. \n\nImage: Getty
Read more »

Australia needs a 'national plan' to deal with Melbourne's COVID outbreak | Sky News AustraliaAustralia needs a 'national plan' to deal with Melbourne's COVID outbreak | Sky News AustraliaThe recent surge in COVID-19 cases in Victoria highlights need for a cohesive, national economic recovery plan, according to Centre Alliance Senator Rex Patrick.\n\nPremier Daniel Andrews has confirmed 134 new coronavirus cases in Victoria in the past 24 hours, 75 of which are from public housing towers across Melbourne.\n\nUnder the state's new lockdown measures - set to come into full force at midnight tonight - the state will remain closed for up to six weeks before the government considers easing restrictions.\n\nAs a result of the surging number of COVID cases in Melbourne, the border between New South Wales and Victoria will close at midnight on Tuesday.\n\nWith Victoria responsible for more than 20 per cent of Australia's GDP, the need for national economic recovery plan plan is pressing, Mr Patrick told Sky News.\n\n“One of the problems we’ve got is that we’re not seeing an integrated plan, something that looks at all aspects including infrastructure as a mechanism for growth, having some elements of manufacturing encouraged for value add and self-reliance,' he said.\n\n“We need to look at this as a national issue and we need to focus on solutions.\n\n “We need to be looking right across the spectrum at the entire package. \n\n“We need an integrated plan.”\n\n
Read more »

NT borders shut to Victorian travellers 'indefinitely' | Sky News AustraliaNT borders shut to Victorian travellers 'indefinitely' | Sky News AustraliaThe Northern Territory will 'indefinitely' shut its borders to anyone travelling from a coronavirus hotspot in Victoria from July 17 when the territory is set to open to the rest of the country. \n\nNT Premier Michael Gunner said he would enforce a mandatory 14-day hotel quarantine period for any Victorians travelling to the territory for essential reasons. \n\nMr Gunner insisted there would be no exemptions made for anyone arriving from a hotspot and any previous exemptions given out would be nullified. \n\n“By being the first to act, and the fastest to act we’ve bought ourselves a time to make the right decision, I can make this decision today knowing that right now our borders are shut to all,” he said. \n\n“For me locking down as hard as you can, as early as you can, minimises the impact and the risk and you wont see that hesitation from me about doing that.” \n\nImage: Getty \n
Read more »

Victorian education sector in jeopardy as UK manoeuvres to fill foreign student gap | Sky News AustraliaVictorian education sector in jeopardy as UK manoeuvres to fill foreign student gap | Sky News AustraliaSky News host Alan Jones says with Australia's international tourism now 'smashed' our economy is going to lose massive amounts of foreign exchange earnings from tourism and education. \n\nEducation is Victoria’s largest export and the international education sector is worth $12.55 billion dollars. \n\nOverall the education industry in Australia is worth $40 billion and employs $240,000 Australians.\n\nInternational Education Association of Australia CEO Phil Honeywood said due to the lockdown measures in place, 27,000 foreign students studying at Melbourne universities will be stranded overseas.\n\nReferencing new British policies incentivising United Kingdom universities for international students, Mr Honeywood said “our competitor countries are really making hay at our expense”.\n\nCanada and the United Kingdom have opened for international students while Australia remains closed as Victoriam schools and university campuses are struggling to cater for domestic students.\n\nImage: News Corp Australia
Read more »

'Six key failures' mar the Victorian COVID-19 health response: Paul Murray | Sky News Australia'Six key failures' mar the Victorian COVID-19 health response: Paul Murray | Sky News AustraliaSky News host Paul Murray says there are six key areas concerning the COVID-19 health response in Victoria for which the Andrews government “must accept responsibility”.\n\nHe touched on the severity of restrictions, the toleration of large race-based rallies, issues surrounding the hotel quarantine debacle and poor communication of health messages to non-English speaking communities.\n\nImage: Getty
Read more »

Victorians banned from entering Tasmania | Sky News AustraliaVictorians banned from entering Tasmania | Sky News AustraliaVictorians have been banned from Tasmania in a bid to stop a second wave of coronavirus in the Island State.\n\nFrom today, anyone who has spent time in Victoria 14 days prior to travel will not be permitted to enter the state and Tasmanians returning home will be required go into quarantine for two weeks. \n\nImage: News Corp Australia
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-04-16 09:44:32