As it happened Ten police officers injured 235 arrested in Melbourne protest police operation stifles Sydney demonstrations
1 of 5
Good evening, and thank you for joining us for live coverage of the dayâs events. In case you are just tuning in, hereâs what youâve missed:
Protesters clashed with police during a violent anti-lockdown rally in Melbourneâs inner east on Saturday.Credit:Chris Hopkins
There was a large police presence in Sydney on Saturday to thwart anti-lockdown protests. NSW Police deemed the operation a success.Credit:Rhett Wyman
Protesters gathering at Perthâs Forrest Place on Saturday. Credit:Kelly Haywood/Nine News Perth
Thank you again for joining us, and be sure to come back tomorrow for more live coverage.
Latest postsVictorian health authorities have identified a number of new COVID-19 exposure sites, including childcare centres and regional businesses.
Bira Bira Early Learning Centre at Cheltenham in Melbourneâs south east was declared a tier-1 or close contact site over three days: between 7am and 6pm from Monday, September 13 through to Wednesday, September 15.
Little Stars at Southern Cross childcare at Docklands in the inner city was declared a tier-1 site over two days: between 11.30am and 6.30pm on Monday, September 13, and between 10.30am and 6.15pm on Tuesday, September 14.
Additionally, Tarneit Rise Primary School was listed as tier1 between 8:30am and 12:30pm on September 13, along with Great Beginnings Reservoir from 9:00am until Midday on September 10 and Kids House Early Learning in Cheltenham from 6:00am until 11:00am on September 16.
Anyone who attended the centres during those timeframes has to immediately get tested for COVID-19 and quarantine for 14 days from the exposure, regardless of whether they receive a negative test result.
The remainder of new exposure sites are tier 2 or casual contact. Good Start Early Learning Centre at North Melbourne was declared a tier-2 site between 8.30am and 3pm on Wednesday, September 15.
Other tier-2 exposure sites include a grocery store at Ascot Vale in Melbourneâs north west, a cafe in Essendon in Melbourneâs north west, and two businesses in Wangaratta in Victoriaâs north east: a service station and a butcher.
Authorities warned some people who attended the otherwise casual contact site of Grillâd at Yarraville in Melbourneâs inner west would be tier-1 contacts.
A full list of Victorian exposure sites can be found here.
Two more venues in Yass in the NSW Southern Tablelands have been declared as COVID-19 exposure sites, with anyone who attended the sites in the relevant periods declared a close contact.
Anyone who attended either venue in the stated times must get tested and isolate for 14 days since the time they were at the venue, regardless of the test result.
NSW Health sends a text message to people who have checked in at close-contact venues with further information.
Authorities have also identified a number of new casual contact exposure sites, which can be viewed on this list on the state governmentâs website.
Anyone who attended any of these venues at the listed times is a casual contact and must immediately get tested and isolate until a negative result is received.
Malaysian Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob fears the new three-way defence alliance between Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom will trigger a nuclear arms race in the contested Indo-Pacific.
On Saturday, Malaysia joined Indonesia in raising alarm bells about the military build-up in the region and the impact that the AUKUS pact, which includes Australia acquiring nuclear-propelled submarines, could have on regional stability.
Ismail Sabri Yaakob spoke to Scott Morrison on the phone on Friday.Credit:Bloomberg
Ismail spoke to Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Friday before on Saturday expressing concern over the establishment of AUKUS to counter a rising China, saying it would be a âcatalyst for a nuclear arms race in the Indo-Pacific regionâ.
âAt the same time, it will provoke other powers to act more aggressively in the region, especially in the South China Sea,â his statement said. âAs a country within ASEAN, Malaysia holds the principle of maintaining ASEAN as a Zone of Peace, Freedom and Neutrality.â
Click here to read the full story.
The chief medical officer of coronavirus vaccine maker Moderna says there is scope for its COVID-19 booster shots to be made onshore in future and the company will look to leverage Australiaâs research talent to make new products.
Speaking to The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age hours after the first doses of Modernaâs COVID vaccine landed in Australia, Dr Paul Burton said the company was progressing talks with the federal government about domestic manufacturing and would look to recruit more local research talent.
The NSW government wants Moderna to set up a manufacturing hub in Sydney.Credit:Bloomberg
âI think there is amazing science in Australia, really fantastic basic scientific and clinical research, Iâve seen that first hand,â Dr Burton, who is based in the US, said.
âWeâre putting our head of Asia Pacific Medical Affairs in Australia â" so at least for my part, I think weâre going to try to build out the team there.â
You can read the full story here.
Women are bearing the brunt of the collapse in lockdown-affected job markets but are poised to recover strongly once restrictions lift and may even find their way back into better-paying positions.
Special research by EY shows almost 100,000 women compared with 73,000 men have left the jobs market over the past two months, during which NSW, Victoria and the ACT have been fully or partly in lockdown to deal with COVID-19 outbreaks.
Women are bearing the brunt of lockdowns, losing hours and spending time on home learning.Credit:iStock
Total female employment levels have fallen by 1.4 per cent and hours worked by women by 6.3 per cent. This compares to declines of 0.4 per cent and 5.2 per cent respectively for men.
EY Oceania chief economist Jo Masters said every time a lockdown had been imposed since last year, womenâs employment and working hours had taken a larger hit than those of their male counterparts.
Read the full story here.
With passport applications plummeting due to closed international borders, processing has recently taken as little as two days.
But authorities are warning wait times will increase when Australiaâs international borders reopen.
The Passport Office issued just 603,464 passports over the past year, compared with more than 1.7 million in the previous year. The means a large number of Australians have allowed their passports to expire, which could result in long wait times once borders reopen.
Qantas has scheduled international flights to start from December 18.Credit:James Brickwood
A Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade spokesperson said that wait times are currently short, but applications had been gradually increasing since August.
âOnce international borders start to reopen, the department expects there will be high demand for passports,â the spokesperson said.
âRecent experience in the United States and the United Kingdom has shown that there was a significant increase in applications ahead of international travel restrictions being lifted in these countries, resulting in long wait times for passports.â
Reports from the US put the wait time for processing at up to four and a half months, as Americans look to travel internationally again.
Click here to read the full story.
While a picnic seems like a meagre reward for enduring Sydneyâs gruelling lockdown, many in the city rejoiced at the eased restrictions on Saturday, flocking to parks and enjoying one anotherâs company until the rain came.
New rules came into effect on Monday allowing Sydney residents who do not live in the 12 local government areas of concern to gather outdoors in groups of five.
The five-person limit does not include children under 12, but people must be within their local government area or five kilometres of their home.
Herald photographers on Saturday captured people at Sydneyâs parks lapping up the change.
You can view a full gallery by clicking here. There are also some photos below.
A picnic is disrupted due to heavy rain at Rushcutters Bay.Credit:Rhett Wyman
A group of kids having fun jumping their bikes in Rushcutters Bay Park.Credit:Rhett Wyman
Picnics are packed up as the rain begins to fall at Centennial Park.Credit:Steven Siewert
NSW Police have described a major police operation targeting a planned anti-lockdown protest on Saturday as a success, with âno real protest activityâ in metropolitan Sydney.
Across NSW there were 32 people arrested in connection with planned protests, while police issued 265 penalty infringement notices. More than 60,000 vehicles were checked at 19 traffic points on major roads.
Police patrolling Sydneyâs Hyde Park on Saturday. Credit:Rhett Wyman
Police were also stationed on the rail networks where a number of the arrests were made for breaches of the public health order and possession of knives.
More than 1700 police were involved in the operation across the state, of which 1500 were deployed across Sydney. The remainder targeted small protests in regional NSW, including in including Tweed Heads, Byron Bay, Central Coast, Wollongong and on the South Coast.
Assistant Commissioner Peter Thurtell on Saturday said the aim of the operation was to prevent protest activity and to enforce the public health order.
âAnd if you have a look at todayâs results I think youâll find that our actions have been very professional, very well received by the public.â
Police at Sydney Park checking IDs at the entrances.Credit:James Brickwood
He said he believed many people who were previously supportive of anti-lockdown protests appeared to have âchanged their mindâ about participating, following the first large scale protest and police operation on July 24.
âThey saw it was not only enforced on the day, but there were follow-up operations to identify those that were in breach not only of the public health order, but more importantly those that assaulted police horses and assaulted police officers,â he said.
âWeâve all been in lockdown for quite some time now and the fact that others are prepared to put that at risk means that we need to enforce the health order.â
Throughout Saturdayâs operation 20 people were arrested in Greater Sydney and 236 PINs were issued. In Byron Bay 11 people were arrested and 28 PINs were issued and one person was arrested and later issued with a PIN in Tweed Heads.
A pub in Yass in regional NSW has been declared a close contact COVID-19 exposure site.
Anyone who attended the Australian Hotel Motel on Comur Street in the town on Saturday, September 11 between 6.45pm and 9.20pm is now considered a close contact.
They must immediately get tested for COVID-19 and quarantine for 14 days from the exposure, regardless of whether they receive a negative result.
NSW health authorities have also identified a number of new casual contact exposure sites, which can be viewed on this list on the state governmentâs website.
The Yass Valley Council local government area was placed back under stay-at-home restrictions on Tuesday for two weeks after a positive case was confirmed in the area.
1 of 5
0 Response to "As it happened Ten police officers injured 235 arrested in Melbourne protest police operation stifles Sydney demonstrations"
Post a Comment