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Australia may keep coronavirus restrictions for a year, schools may work on roster


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Australia may keep coronavirus restrictions for a year, schools may work on roster

By Byron Kaye

 

2020-04-17T005730Z_1_LYNXMPEG3G02W_RTROPTP_4_HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-AUSTRALIA.JPG

A child rides a bike following the implementation of stricter social-distancing and self-isolation rules to limit the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Sydney, Australia, April 16, 2020. REUTERS/Loren Elliott

 

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian public life could be constrained for another year because of the coronavirus pandemic, Prime Minister Scott Morrison warned on Friday, as the country's most populous state mulled sending children to school in shifts.

 

Australia has so far avoided the high numbers of coronavirus casualties reported around the world after closing its borders and imposing strict "social distancing" measures for the past month.

 

Restaurants, bars and other "non-essential" businesses have closed and public gatherings of more than two people are banned under the threat of fines and even prison, measures that are expected to double the unemployment rate by mid-year.

 

In response, the daily growth rate of reported new infections has steadied in the low percentage single digits, from about 25% several weeks ago, for a total of about 6,500 infections, including 63 deaths.

 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said some measures, like the rule requiring people to stand at least 1.5 metres apart, would likely remain for several months, given there was no guarantee a vaccine would be developed in that time.

 

"Social distancing is something we should get very used to," Morrison told radio station 3AW. "It could be a year, but I'm not speculating about that."

 

"Certainly while the virus is prevalent across the world (the 1.5 metre rule) should be a natural instinct."

 

Morrison had said on Thursday the wider social distancing measures would be in place for at least another four weeks, while advocating the reopening of schools across the country, citing medical advice that children are a low risk of transmission.

 

That guidance has been contradicted by several states and territories, which are responsible for schools governance, and brought a public backlash from parents and teachers concerned about exposure to the virus.

 

In Australia's second most populous state, Victoria, just 3% of children returned to school after the Easter break this week, while the most populous state, New South Wales, has children still on a break.

 

"We are considering our options around a rostering system which will have some students go back on a particular day to increase that level of face-to-face," New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian told reporters on Friday.

 

"The alternative is that unfortunately students could face up to a year or longer at home and we don't that's appropriate," she added.

 

(Reporting by Byron Kaye; editing by Jane Wardell)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-04-17
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18 minutes ago, Wake Up said:

The same amount that die in car crashes yet we still drive, smoking yet we still smoke, the same that drink alcohol or overdose on drugs yet we still have liquor stores and pharmacies, same amount that die of suicide because we do not have adequate mental health care, the same amount that die in wars, the same amount that will starve to death if they cannot work. Respectfully your statement is selfish and pompous. Good for you that you can be so righteous. ????

Suicide 3000

Corona 60 odd

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6 hours ago, Mick501 said:

Stellar work throughout by the Morrison government.  Made possible by brilliant management, fortunate geography and strong border policy.  

 

Scary thought of what would have happened with an ALP government and thousands arriving on boats every week from severely hit Indonesia.  

He let ships in

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12 hours ago, samran said:

So which 120,000 Australians (assuming a very conservative 0.5% death rate) are you going to chose to give up their lives for that? 

Similar ones to that of 12 months ago who were elderly had heart disease, cancer and other life threatening medical conditions, who then caught the flu and died. 

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6 hours ago, rhyddid said:

Yeahh, keep everybody locked, chipped and most of all vaccinated !

Scenes that would make George Orwell blush.  Scott did say that Aussies could have their freedoms back as soon as everyone downloads his app. yay!!

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7 minutes ago, samran said:

Fine, then you stand up from behind your keyboard. loud and proud and tell Australians we should just let it rip. 
 

yeah, nah, didn’t think so either...

your emotional state, caused in part to not being able to watch grown men kick a ball around, is effecting your ability to think clearly and rationally.  I apologize if you are:

A- a menstruating woman

B- taking hormones to become a woman or

C- a child

Edited by BeltAndRoad
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15 hours ago, samran said:

So which 120,000 Australians (assuming a very conservative 0.5% death rate) are you going to chose to give up their lives for that? 

Poverty kills too.

The TVF demographic will, in the main, IMO, be largely unaffected by the crisis financially, many being retirees with guaranteed incomes, and others being wealthy enough to be able to spend hours a day on here.

The ordinary bloke and woman in an Aussie city with a young family to support that just lost their jobs, and with few prospects of another for some time may have a different outlook.

Edited by thaibeachlovers
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