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South Africa: Today’s latest news and headlines, Wednesday 27 May

For all the latest news in South Africa, be sure to check out headlines making waves across the country on Wednesday 27 May.

Following a controversial postponement on Tuesday, Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma and the National Coronavirus Command Council (NCCC) are scheduled to address the nation on Level 3 lockdown regulations. Meanwhile, the South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) struggles to honour Relief of Distress grants, further embattling the country’s most vulnerable citizens.

TODAY’S LATEST NEWS IN SOUTH AFRICA, Wednesday 27 MAY

Rescheduled: Dlamini-Zuma, NCCC to address South Africa

With the date for South Africa’s move to Level 3 lockdown drawing ever-nearer, the NCCC, tasked with amending regulations of the Disaster Management Act in line with government’s risk-adjusted approach, is expected to provide clarity on the reopening of the economy.

The NCCC, chaired by Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs Minister, Dlamini-Zuma, has yet to officially gazette Level 3 lockdown regulations, leaving the window for change wide open, despite earlier assertions by President Cyril Ramaphosa.

Dlamini-Zuma’s briefing comes amid a stern public condemnation of government’s continued tobacco ban, with the minister’s relationship with self-confessed cigarette smuggler, Adriano Mazzotti, coming under the microscope. Dlamini-Zuma has denied being ‘friends’ with Mazzotti, despite allegations of the two holidaying together in Europe.

Social Relief of Distress Grants: Sassa making slow progress

With more than 3 million unemployed South Africans applying for financial assistance – in the form of the unique R350 Social Relief of Distress Grant – Sassa’s administrative systems have buckled under the weight.

Despite the electronic application system being launched two weeks ago, Sassa has only managed to process 75 000 claims. Adding insult to injury, Sassa spokesperson Paseka Letsatsi confirmed that only half of those applications would be eligible for payment. Letsatsi explained that the vetting process had found that “some are getting the UIF or some of them are on National Student Finance Aid Scheme (NSFAS)”.

Letsatsi remained confident that the severe backlog would be cleared, adding that Sassa staff were working “around the clock” to ensure all eligible beneficiaries received assistance.

MetroRail unlikely to operate at Level 3 lockdown

The Gauteng Legislature’s Portfolio Committee on Roads and Transport says the opening of rail during level 3 lockdown could spell a public transport catastrophe.

The committee said it is was not pleased with the measures presented by the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa’s administrator, Bongisizwe Mpondo, on their readiness to receive passengers under level 3 lockdown regulations.

“As the bulk of working class citizens go back to work, trains are expected to be operational effective 1 June 2020. However, plans presented by PRASA are short of a Gauteng province integrated system and could lead to a public transport disaster during level 3,” the Committee said.

According to the statement released, it has emerged that Metrorail will only have one line in operation in the Gauteng province.

“This move only addresses the north Gauteng commuters, leaving out all other regions in the province.”

Moreover, issues of safety, security and screening measures presented by Mpondo were not reassuring to the committee.

“Some of the doubts were prompted by the fact that PRASA has no indication on average figures of their daily commuters, therefore, making PRASA’s mitigation plans feeble, as they are not informed on any context including that of daily commuters.”

According to the Chairperson of the Roads and Transport Committee, Dumisani Dakile, while they understand PRASA is under administration and faces immense challenges, it has to put the passengers’ lives first. (Source: SAnews)

School vandalism, theft and lack of PPEs threaten reopening plans

Although classrooms are scheduled to reopen to Grade 7 and 12 pupils next week, a wave of vandalism and theft, added to the dire lack of personal protective equipment (PPE) promised by national government, could spell disaster for the back to school plan.

The Council of Education Ministers (CEM) has condemned the looting of schools supplies and PPEs, after classrooms in both Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal were ransacked. KwaZulu-Natal Education MEC Kwazi Mshengu noted with grave concern the fact that 463 schools had been vandalised during lockdown.

Adding to the education sector’s woes, two Cape Town schools have already been forced to close, before even officially reopening, due to teachers testing positive for the coronavirus.

LATEST WEATHER FORECAST, Monday 27 MAY

Take a look at weather forecasts for all nine provinces here.

LIVE TRAFFIC UPDATES FOR CAPE TOWN, JOHANNESBURG AND DURBAN

Stay one step ahead of the traffic by viewing our live traffic updates here.

HOROSCOPE TODAY

Free daily horoscope, celeb gossip and lucky numbers for Tuesday 27 May.



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Kayleigh McEnany: ‘Peculiar’ That Joe Biden Doesn’t Wear Mask In His Home

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany made a dig at former Vice President Joe Biden on Tuesday for wearing a face mask in public but not in his own home, claiming it was a “peculiar” move.

The comment came in response to a reporter’s question about President Donald Trump’s apparent criticism of Biden for wearing a mask in public on Memorial Day. In Delaware, where the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee lives, wearing a mask in public is required by law as part of public health efforts to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus.

“The president’s excited to see that Joe emerged from the basement,” McEnany said at the White House press briefing. “It is a bit peculiar, though, that in his basement, right next to his wife, he’s not wearing a mask, but he’s wearing one outdoors when he’s socially distanced.”

She added that the president wasn’t “shaming anyone” and noted that Trump wore a mask in private during a tour of a Ford plant last week in Michigan. Publicly, Trump appeared barefaced for much of the tour, despite a Michigan executive order that required facial coverings to be worn in any enclosed public space.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s federal guidelines also call for people to wear cloth face coverings in public, in concert with social distancing rules. Masks are not required in the home among household members. 

When Reuters reporter Jeff Mason pointed to this guidance, McEnany said that “it’s recommended but not required, so it’s the personal choice of the individual, but it didn’t strike him as a very data-driven decision.”

Biden had appeared with his wife, Jill Biden, at the Delaware Memorial Bridge Veterans Memorial Park on Monday to lay a wreath, marking his first public appearance in more than two months. 

Sharing an image of Biden during the outing, Fox News political analyst Brit Hume attempted to mask-shame the Democratic front-runner on Twitter ― a move that was met with swift backlash. The president then retweeted Hume’s comment. 

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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Coronavirus LIVE updates: US toll nears 1 lakh-mark; global cases cross 5.5 lakh

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Coronavirus India LIVE updates: The ICMR has outlined the need for research on the effects of the coronavirus in lungs and other organs of the human body

Coronavirus India LIVE updates:

A call for study of lung tissues of patients who die of Covid-19 by conducting postmortem biopsies has found no takers in Karnataka, primarily due to complications involved in dealing with contagion deaths.

To understand the disease’s progression in the lungs, which is the primary organ damaged by coronavirus, a provision for conducting lung biopsies in patients who die due to Covid has been made by the Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences in Karnataka and the Indian Council for Medical Research but no proposals have been made so far, said officials.

Cases in the unassigned category make up 2 per cent of India’s total cases

On the other hand, cases in the unassigned category make up 2 per cent of the country’s 1,45,380 cases of coronavirus infection as of Tuesday, and could potentially skew the case curves of several states.

The category “Cases being reassigned to states” was introduced in mid-May. Numbers under that head grew from 230 on May 16 to 1,403 on May 21, to 2,970 cases on May 26. The category has no information on recovery or deaths within this group, unlike the other state categories. Government officials said that the category captures the cases where discrepancies exist between the person’s home state and current states.

Meanwhile, with 328 new cases and 18 deaths in the last seven days, Covid-19 hotspots under the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) are rising. In the 67 days from March 2 to May 8, 1,133 cases were reported in Telangana. Of these, 626 were in GHMC areas. However, in the next 18 days (May 8-25), 597 cases were reported from GHMC areas while a total of 787 cases were reported in the state — including 158 cases of migrant workers who returned to the state testing positive.

Coronavirus India LIVE updates: En route home, migrant labourers seen at the Ghaziabad border on May 27, 2020. (Express Photo: Prem Nath Pandey)

Centre asks states, UTs to negotiate with private labs, bring down test price

Also, even as private diagnostic laboratories cite the Rs 4,500 price cap as one of the pain points for their coronavirus testing numbers stagnating at less than 20 per cent of daily tests done in the country, the Centre wants the price to be reduced further. This is in the light of availability of indigenous testing kits and other supplies, unlike in March, when all these had to be imported amid tough global competition.

Guards, vegetable vendors in ICMR list of frontline workers who need testing

Police personnel at check points, building security guards, airport staff, bus drivers and staff, vegetable vendors and pharmacists have been identified by Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) as “frontline workers” who need to be tested for Covid-19 if they show flu-like symptoms. This is in addition to healthcare workers, paramedics and returning migrants.

Seventy-four of 82 ICU beds earmarked for Covid-19 patients in the city’s seven private hospitals are occupied at the moment. At six government hospitals, on the other hand, only 111 of 348 ICU beds for novel coronavirus patients are occupied.

As the case tally in the capital continues to rise — 412 fresh cases were reported on Tuesday, taking the total to 14,465 — several accounts have emerged of severely ill people being unable to get admitted to ICUs in private hospitals.

Also Read:

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MP district Burhanpur: More beds ready, need doctors

Solidarity Trial: What progress has been made so far?

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Minneapolis protests over George Floyd’s in-custody death grow volatile

Hundreds of protesters gathered in Minneapolis on Tuesday night to decry the in-custody death of George Floyd, which led to the firing of four officers.

Demonstrations became unruly, with windows damaged, graffiti sprayed and a police car vandalized. Officers in riot gear confronted protesters and fired tear gas.

One person was shot during Tuesday’s rally inside a building near the site where Floyd was detained a day earlier. Floyd was pinned to the ground by an officer who put his knee on Floyd’s neck for about eight minutes in an incident that was captured on video.

“Please, please, please, I can’t breathe,” Floyd, who was black, begged the white officer. “My stomach hurts. My neck hurts. Please, please. I can’t breathe.”

Tuesday’s shooting was described as non-life-threatening, said police spokesman John Elder. A suspect fled the scene. It wasn’t clear if the violence was related to the protests.

One newspaper reporter said on Twitter he was struck with a projectile. “I Was just shot with this in the thigh,” he said.

The Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis said in a statement earlier Tuesday that the fired officers were fully cooperating with the investigation.

“We must review all video. We must wait for the medical examiner’s report,” the statement said. “Officers’ actions and training protocol will be carefully examined after the officers have provided their statements.”

In a statement early Tuesday, Minneapolis police said the officers were responding to a report of a forgery in progress and found the suspect in his car. They said he got out of the car when ordered, but then physically resisted officers.

This is a developing story

Gemma DiCasimirro and Associated Press contributed.



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China’s Workers, Hong Kong Protests, SpaceX Launch: Your Wednesday Briefing

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Good morning.

We’re covering China’s push to help its young struggling workers, protests in Hong Kong and a milestone on Wall Street for the U.S. reopening.

Beijing’s major focus is getting the economy off the ground after a weekslong deep freeze. Young people are feeling the pressure as they enter perhaps China’s toughest job market in the modern era.

They are reducing their expectations, taking pay cuts and in many cases waiting on the sidelines until things get better. Amid the trade war with the U.S. and tensions with Hong Kong, their future looks uncertain.

Finding jobs for young workers has become a major priority for Chinese leaders, who have long promised a better life in exchange for limits on political freedom.

Details: The jobless rate for people ages 16 to 24 totaled nearly 14 percent, more than twice the official figure for the nation as a whole.

Quotable: “I can’t just keep waiting,” said one recent graduate of a prestigious drama school whose job prospects were gutted in the shutdown.

The result: Only 200 cases were found, mostly people who showed no symptoms.

The blanket testing cost hundreds of millions of dollars and mobilized thousands of medical and other workers.

But this did not deter the government, which saw the testing as critical to restoring the public confidence needed to help restart the economy and return to some level of normalcy, our correspondents write.

Supporters of the testing drive said the true value of the campaign was not so much medical as psychological.

Quotable: “If there is no testing, everyone will still be scared,” said Guo Guangchang, head of Fosun, a Chinese conglomerate. “Many companies will have no way to resume production, and the service industry will have no customers.”

The remarks on Tuesday were made on the sidelines of the National People’s Congress, and they came as Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s chief executive, defended the central government’s contentious plan to draft new national security laws to punish acts of subversion.

Hong Kong’s pro-democracy activists are preparing to hold new protests today, though turnout is expected to be smaller than the throngs of hundreds of thousands we saw last year. The Congress is set to vote on the laws on Thursday.

Analysis: Steven Lee Myers, our Beijing bureau chief, said the mainland government’s move amounted to “rattling the saber,” but added that it was “certainly a chilling message.”

The Taliban are on the verge of realizing their biggest desire: U.S. troops leaving Afghanistan. And the group has managed to do so without changing much of its extremist ideology.

At a pivotal moment in the war, our reporters delved into the insurgents’ strategy, through dozens of interviews, including a rare one with Amir Khan Mutaqi, the chief of staff to the Taliban’s supreme leader.

In Memoriam: Stanley Ho, the casino tycoon who transformed Macau into a global gambling hub, died on Tuesday in Hong Kong. He was 98.

Oil from Iran: An oil tanker has sailed into Venezuela from Iran, the first of five ships expected to arrive in a nation so starved of gasoline that the docking of a single tanker was hailed by government officials as a victory.

Snapshot: Above, traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday for the first day of floor trading in two months. The floor is operating at 10 percent capacity, with most traders still working from home.

What we’re reading: This GQ profile of Steve Buscemi, who opens up about anxiety and loss. The writer’s interview with Buscemi was also her last restaurant meal before the pandemic shut down New York City, and it’s everything you need right now.

Cook: Adding English peas to this green pea guacamole “is one of those radical moves that is also completely obvious after you taste it,” says Melissa Clark.

Do: Now that many homes have become de facto offices, work wardrobes have adjusted. The robe is just one of many cozy styles catching on in isolation. And here are some simple stretches to help you counter the unhealthy effects of all that sitting.

On Wednesday, two NASA astronauts are set to blast off from American soil on an American rocket to space for the first time in nearly a decade. In a first, the launch is being run by a private company, SpaceX, founded by Elon Musk. Sanam Yar, on the newsletters team, spoke with Kenneth Chang, a science reporter at The Times who covers NASA, about the launch. Here’s what he said:

Back in 1968, Pan Am started issuing memberships for its “First Moon Flights” club to space enthusiasts hoping to someday book a commercial flight there. It was a fanciful promotion — the membership card was free — but more than 93,000 people signed up.

Pan Am is long out of business, and we’re still a long way away from someone being able to buy a ticket to the moon, but the SpaceX launch is the first real step toward that dream. Although NASA has been involved in working with SpaceX, this is SpaceX’s operation. In the future, NASA will simply pay the going rate for a ticket to the space station and not be involved with running its own space transportation system to low-Earth orbit.

SpaceX has been somewhat insulated, because although Elon is the visionary (Mars! Internet satellites!) and cheerleader for the company, people look to Gwynne Shotwell, the president and chief operating officer, to keep an even keel for the company’s day-to-day work. Tesla probably needs someone like that.


That’s it for this briefing. See you next time.

— Melina and Carole


Thank you
To Melissa Clark for the recipe, and to Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh for the rest of the break from the news. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com.

P.S.
• We’re listening to “The Daily.” Our latest episode is about two Mexican migrant brothers who died of the coronavirus shortly after they got to their new home in the U.S. To fulfill their dying wish, to be buried in Mexico, their family must navigate a patchwork of pandemic laws and bureaucracies.
• Here’s our Mini Crossword, and a clue: The “m” of E = mc² (four letters). You can find all our puzzles here.
• Join our Parenting editor for a conversation with Pooja Lakshmin, a perinatal psychiatrist, about balancing parenthood and me time right now.

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Biden: Trump’s ‘an absolute fool’ for stoking face mask controversy

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Joe Biden departs the Delaware Memorial Bridge Veteran’s Memorial Park in New Castle, Delaware, May 25, 2020 | Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images

The US president retweeted an image that appeared to mock Biden wearing a mask in his first public appearance in months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

U.S. President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden amped up their ongoing spat over wearing face masks in public on Tuesday with Biden calling the president an “absolute fool” for stoking controversy around the use of masks.

The beef began Monday evening, when the president retweeted an image that appeared to mock Biden wearing a mask in his first public appearance in months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

“This might help explain why Trump doesn’t like to wear a mask in public. Biden today,” Fox News political analyst Brit Hume wrote in the tweet. Alongside the tweet was a close up of Biden, with most of his face covered by a black mask, wearing his signature aviator sunglasses, during a visit to a Delaware memorial for U.S. military personnel.

While Trump didn’t add his own comment to the retweet, the president has been accused of stoking a culture war over the kind of face coverings now recommended — but not required — by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to slow the spread of coronavirus.

Several weeks ago, when two White House aides tested positive for the virus, masks became mandatory in the West Wing for nearly everyone — except the president. Trump has repeatedly eschewed masks on his growing number of public outings. Instead, he said he is taking a malaria drug that is not proven to treat or prevent coronavirus.

Trump finally donned a face mask for the first time last week when he visited a Ford plant in Michigan where masks are required, though he only wore his mask in private, telling the press traveling with him that he didn’t want to give them the satisfaction of seeing him wear it.

Biden had sharp words for the president over what he called a lack of leading by example, accusing Trump of “stoking deaths.”

“He’s a fool, an absolute fool to talk that way,” Biden told CNN’s Dana Bash in his first in-person interview since having to hit pause on traditional campaigning due to the virus. “I mean every leading doc in the world is saying you should wear a mask when you’re in a crowd, and especially when you know you’re going to be in a position where you’re going to inadvertently get closer than 12 feet to somebody.”

He accused Trump of caving to “macho stuff,” the argument advanced by some opposed to wearing masks that doing so is a sign of weakness. “That’s not going to increase the likelihood that people are going to be better off,” he added later.

Asked Tuesday how he viewed wearing a face covering, Biden said he believes doing so projects “leadership.”

“Presidents are supposed to lead, not engage in folly and be falsely masculine,” he argued.

Trump insisted Tuesday that he hadn’t intended to criticize Biden’s mask, calling it “very unusual” that the former vice president and his presumptive election rival decided to wear one while out “with his wife” in “perfect conditions, perfect weather” and that Biden doesn’t wear a face covering while indoors with his wife. According to the CDC’s recommendations for face coverings, masks aren’t needed while at home.

“Biden can wear a mask,” Trump said. “I wasn’t criticizing him. Why would I ever do a thing like that?”

Immediately afterward, Trump accused the reporter who asked the question of attempting to be “politically correct” for declining to remove his own mask after the president said he couldn’t hear properly.

Hours earlier, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany had also insisted that the president wasn’t “shaming anyone” with his retweet, but like Trump, called it “peculiar” that Biden wore a mask for his Memorial Day outing despite already being socially distant. The CDC, along with members of Trump’s coronavirus task force, have emphasized that face coverings are meant to supplement, not replace social distancing.

“As the president noted himself said he wore this mask in private at the Ford facility and he said he’s open to it if the circumstance mandates it,” McEnany said. “It didn’t strike him as a very data driven in that particular instance.”



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Amy Klobuchar, under scrutiny in VP stakes, calls for prosecution of Minneapolis cops

Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) called for the prosecution of the Minneapolis police officers involved in the death of George Floyd in her Tuesday appearance on CNN’s Cuomo Prime Time.

Klobuchar appeared on the program to talk about the now-viral video showing officers kneeling on Floyd’s throat. Floyd can be heard in the video telling the officers he can’t breathe; later, he appears to lose consciousness. He was pronounced dead when an ambulance took him to a local medical facility.

Though Klobuchar, former Democratic candidate for president and potential vice presidential nominee, called for the officers in the video to be prosecuted, she has a reputation from her time as a prosecutor of going after light sentences for police officers charged with killing citizens. This reputation has cost her support in African American communities.

“I spent the day talking to the mayor, talking to Attorney General Keith Ellison talking to our African American leaders, and this is the first step,” Klobuchar said on Cuomo Prime Time, calling the Minneapolis police chief’s decision to immediately fire the officers “the right thing to do.”

“These cases can be considered immediately, fairly but swiftly, for criminal charges because you just can’t have something like this. He was pleading for his life and outsiders were telling the officer, very clearly, ‘He can’t breathe, he can’t breathe.’ This was not a sudden mistake or procedure gone bad,” she added.


Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), shown here after the Democratic presidential primary debate on February 19, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada, has called for the prosecution of the officers involved in the death of George Floyd.
Ethan Miller/Getty

Klobuchar also referenced the shooting death of Philando Castile, a man killed by police in Minnesota. In that case, Castile was shot by Officer Jeronimo Yanez after informing Yanez that he had a legal firearm. Castile was shot five times by Yanez after reaching to give the officer his license and registration. In that case, though Yanez was fired, he was acquitted of all charges.

“I supported that prosecution. The jury didn’t agree with the prosecutor in that case, but I think what is happening right now is that finally people are starting to see videos of some of these cases. I think over time that changes minds, but it is not enough time to change the life [of the victim],” she said.

Though Klobuchar is now calling for the prosecution of the officers involved in Floyd’s death, when she was prosecutor, she was often seen as taking officers’ side. Nekima Levy Armstrong, a Minnesota civil rights attorney who protested Klobuchar, told Newsweek she felt that Klobuchar’s time as prosecutor was marred by a “failure to hold law enforcement officials accountable for shooting and killing African-Americans.”

Klobuchar has been named a potential running mate for former Vice President Joe Biden, however, during the primary, Klobuchar also didn’t receive much support from the black community. She received 3 percent from black voters in Nevada, and 1 percent support from black voters in South Carolina.

In 2002, as prosecutor, Klobuchar called for, and won, a life sentence for Minnesota teen Myon Burrell for the death of an 11-year-old black girl named Tyesha Edwards. After an investigation by the Associated Press that found several major inconsistencies in the case, Klobuchar asked for an independent investigation into the case in March 2020.

Newsweek reached out to Klobuchar’s office for further comment. This article will be updated with any response.

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Australia Records Youngest Coronavirus Victim With Death Of 30-Year-Old

Australia recorded its youngest victim of COVID-19 after a 30-year-old man with underlying health conditions died in Queensland, having shown symptoms of the disease for weeks but without getting tested, officials said on Wednesday.

The latest case brings to 103 the number of deaths recorded in Australia, from more than 7,100 cases.

Australia has been one of the most successful nations when it comes to containing the coronavirus spread, which officials attribute to early travel restrictions, social distancing measures and widespread testing.

Authorities were tracing a possible link between the man and the Ruby Princess cruise ship which docked in Sydney in March and was responsible for Australia’s biggest outbreak of the virus, Queensland state officials said.

“He was showing symptoms prior to his death but also had other illnesses. He tested positive in the post mortem. His partner is now sick with symptoms. She is now being isolated,” QLD Premier Anastasia Palaszczuk said.

Police and medics who attended the man are now in isolation.

Life is beginning to return to normal with schools returning to face-to-face learning this week and the National Rugby League competition set to resume on Thursday.

“Large parts of the country have had no cases for prolonged periods and the majority of our cases now are returned travellers, with only a handful of people still in intensive care,” Australia’s Chief Medical Officer, Brendan Murphy, told a government enquiry.

If Australia had registered the same death rate as the United Kingdom, it would have had some 14,000 deaths, Murphy added.

“So I think we have done well, we are in a very cautious phase now of trying to move to a living-with-COVID economy.”

Morrison Wants State And Territory Borders Open ASAP, Says Closures ‘Harm Economy’

Still, several state and territory borders remained closed, raising tensions between officials as the focus shifts to reviving the economy, facing its first recession in three decades.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison reiterated the Federal government’s stance that there was no advice for states to keep their borders closed.

“That was never the medical expert advice that came at any time. Premiers and their governments in states, whether it is South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania, Queensland, have all made their own decisions and so they have got to justify those decisions,” he told Channel Nine’s Today show on Wednesday. 

“There is no doubt that those sort of borders do harm the economy, they do harm jobs and it is important that we get those removed as soon as possible.”

NSW Puts Pay Freeze On Public Sector

Nurses, teachers and police officers in NSW will not get their annual pay increase, Premier Gladys Berejiklian confirmed on Wednesday.  

“There are 410,000 employees in the New South Wales public service, of which the Treasurer and I are, too. And none of us, nobody, will be getting a pay rise from this period onwards for the next 12 months as agreements come up,” she told reporters. 

“The reason for this is that every spare dollar we have and every dollar we don’t have, we need to spend in health and also in jobs and job security.

“Nobody will be forced out of a job in the New South Wales public service.” 

 



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Family’s plea for help after Australian-born boy deemed a taxpayer burden

The Bangladeshi parents of a six-year-old boy born in Australia are calling on the government to intervene after spending more than four years under the threat of deportation.

Adyan bin Hasan is a happy and energetic child who loves to run, play and ride his scooter around his home in Geelong, Victoria.

But Adyan has been deemed a burden on the taxpayer because he has mild cerebral palsy and a mild intellectual disability.

The conditions, caused by a stroke at birth, were so slight most people did not realise Adyan had them, his father Mahedi Bhuiyan said.

However, when Dr Bhuiyan and Adyan’s mother Rebaka Sultana filed for permanent residency in March 2016, their application was denied under Australia’s strict “one fails all fail” visa health criteria.

Dr Bhuiyan, who is a structural engineer, had been nominated to apply for a permanent skilled migration visa after finishing his PhD at Deakin University.

Ms Sultana was a medical doctor in Bangladesh and is currently preparing to sit examinations to be registered to practice in Australia.

Dr Bhuiyan said he had expected their visa application to be a straightforward process and was left in shock when it was rejected.

“I could not sleep for the first week. Even now, I can’t sleep more than one or two hours a night because I feel that I’m dreaming actually. I am thinking everything will go away once I wake up,” he said.

‘All the things I am doing is for the hope of my son,’ Dr Bhuiyan says. (Supplied: Mahedi Bhuiyan)

What followed was a lengthy process of appealing the decision through the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT), which ultimately upheld the Immigration Department’s decision in late 2018.

Not willing to give up on the family’s dream of living in Australia, Dr Bhuiyan applied for a ministerial intervention last August and the case now rests with Assistant Minister for Customs, Community Safety and Multicultural Affairs Jason Wood, who has the discretionary power to grant a visa.

In February this year, the family underwent further police checks and medical assessments at the request of the NSW Ministerial Intervention Office, as well as obtaining letters from Adyan’s paediatrician and school.

Adyan attends a mainstream primary school and his disabilities are so slight most people don't notice them, his dad says.
Adyan attends a mainstream primary school and his disabilities are so slight most people don’t notice them, his dad says. (Supplied: Mahedi Bhuiyan)

Dr Bhuiyan said his son was doing well at his mainstream primary school and only needed a small amount of extra support.

“His condition is good, he can run and read and write. He rides his scooter to school,” he said.

The letter from Adyan’s paediatrician, seen by nine.com.au, states his patient had made “superb progress over the years” and was now fully mobile; able to run, climb stairs and ride a scooter.

Adyan was able to write and draw, had good language skills and would only require modest support going forward, the letter stated.

For the past four years, the family have been living in Australia on a bridging visa, which needs to be extended every two-and-a-half months.

Dr Bhuiyan said waiting for so long and not knowing what would happen to his family had taken an enormous toll.

“We feel that we are unable to breathe. I don’t know how long I will survive. I am tired and my hands are tied,” he said.

Dr Bhuiyan said he feared if they were deported his son would face discrimination in Bangladesh, where people with even mild disabilities can be shunned because of superstitions.

Under the conditions of his bridging visa, only one of Adyan’s parents is able to work and neither are able to get full-time jobs.

Dr Bhuiyan said he was currently working two casual jobs at Coles and 7-Eleven to support his family, but it was a sacrifice he was willing to make.

“It is nothing that I am doing this, all the things I am doing is for the hope of my son,” he said.

Adyan, with his mum Rebaka Sultana and dad Mahedi Bhuiyan.
Adyan, with his mum Rebaka Sultana and dad Mahedi Bhuiyan. (Supplied: Mahedi Bhuiyan)

Dr Bhuiyan said he still believed the Australia government would show compassion towards his family.

“I understand my son needs some help but he is not a burden. All I am asking is please give us a chance.”

Other families facing deportation under circumstances similar to Adyan’s have been granted a ministerial intervention.

Last year, the Irish parents of Australian-born toddler Darragh Hyde were granted permanent residency after he was initially deemed a taxpayer burden because of his cystic fibrosis.

The Department of Home Affairs is yet to respond to nine.com.au’s request for comment.

While the department does not usually comment on individual cases, it has previously said:

“Most visas require applicants to meet the migration health requirement set out in Australian migration law. The health requirement is not condition-specific and the assessment is undertaken individually for each applicant based on their condition and level of severity.”

“It is an objective assessment to determine whether the care of the individual during their stay in Australia would likely result in significant costs to the Australian community or prejudice the access of Australian citizens and permanent residents to services in short supply.

“For certain visas, primary criteria for the grant of the visa requires that all members of a family unit satisfy certain requirements. If one of the members of a family unit does not satisfy these requirements, then the primary applicant will not meet the criteria for the grant of the visa.”

Contact reporter Emily McPherson at emcpherson@nine.com.au.

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Hong Kong on edge before National Anthem Bill: Live updates

Riot police surrounded Hong Kong’s legislature on Wednesday morning as protesters threatened to take to the streets before the second reading of the controversial National Anthem Bill.

The bill would make it a criminal offence to “disrespect” the national anthem of the People’s Republic of China. It would also require that the anthem be taught in schools and sung by organisations. 

The semi-autonomous Chinese territory is also on edge over China’s plans to impose “national security” legislation.

The Legislative Council, known as Legco, is due to start its session at 11am (03:00 GMT). Police have also taken to walkways around the area and are checking passers-by.

02:00 GMT – Five youngsters arrested with petrol bombs, helmets, gas masks

AFP is reporting that the police have arrested five under-18s in three different areas around the city. One group had molotov cocktails, another a screwdriver and the others helmets and gas masks. The youngest is just 14.

00:30 GMT – Trump warns US to have “strong response” to China security legislation

US President Donald Trump says the US will announce its response to China’s plan to impose national security legislation on Hong Kong by the end of this week.

When asked whether the response would include sanctions, Trump responded: “No, it’s something you’re going to be hearing about … before the end of the week, very powerfully, I think.”

You can read more on Trump’s comments and US reaction to China’s recent moves in Hong Kong here.

00:00 GMT – Hundreds of riot police surround Legco

Hundreds of riot police have been deployed around the Legco building, which has been sealed off behind a wall of blue and white water-filled plastic barriers, according to Reuters.


SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies



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