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As it happened Australia news: NSW records 1029 new local COVID-19 cases; three deaths; restrictions eased for fully vaccinated people; Victoria records 80 new cases

Broede Carmody, Michaela Whitbourn and Katina Curtis
Updated ,first published

The day in review

By Michaela Whitbourn

Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the day’s events. If you are just joining us now, here’s what you need to know:

  • Prime Minister Scott Morrison will unveil a plan tomorrow for vaccinating the country’s 12- to 15-year-olds against COVID-19. While children in this age group are not included in national vaccination targets for easing restrictions (set at 70 and 80 per cent of people aged over 16), Mr Morrison has promised they “will be vaccinated”.
  • NSW Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant has warned coronavirus case numbers may continue to rise as the state recorded 1029 locally acquired infections, a new daily record in Australia. Three men, aged in their 30s, 60s and 80s, died at home in western Sydney. All three were unvaccinated and being cared for in out-of-hospital care. Their deaths appear to have prompted a plea from authorities for people infected with COVID-19 to call for help, including an ambulance if necessary, if their symptoms deteriorate.
  • Regional NSW’s lockdown will be extended to September 10, following additional cases in the state’s west. Deputy Premier John Barilaro said “the decision to extend the lockdown is one to protect communities and protect the regions. We’re sitting on a knife edge. It’s a tinderbox ready to explode.”
NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian on Thursday, with Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant and Health Minister Brad Hazzard following behind her.Janie Barrett

      COVID-19 positive man arrested in Sydney after allegedly failing to isolate

      By Daniella White

      A Sydney man who tested positive for COVID-19 and allegedly refused to isolate has been arrested after being on the run since last week.

      An arrest warrant for 27-year-old Anthony Karam was issued on August 20 for multiple alleged breaches of public health orders.

      Police issued an arrest warrant for Anthony Karam, 27.NSW Police

      After appealing for the public’s help, NSW Police arrested Mr Karam about 5.30pm on Thursday at a unit in Wentworth Point in Sydney’s west.

      Charges are expected to be laid.

      Read the full story here.

      Catch distribution centre, Kilysth Coles among new exposure sites

      By Roy Ward

      A distribution centre and a Kilsyth supermarket in Melbourne’s Yarra Ranges are among the new entries on Victoria’s exposure sites list.

      A distribution centre in Truganina for online shopping site Catch has been listed as a tier one site from 2pm to 10.30am on August 23 and August 24, while Coles Kilysth is a tier two site for 10am to 11am on August 23.

      Altona business Borgcraft was added to the exposure sites list later on Thursday night as a tier one site.

      The Slough Road, Altona business was listed as a tier one site for anyone at the venue on August 23 and August 24 from 5.30am to 4pm when a positive case was at the location.

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      ‘Nonsense’: Howard scoffs at claims he won 2001 election due to children overboard affair

      By Roy Ward

      Former Prime Minister John Howard says he regrets the prominence given to his comments on the children overboard scandal, which were made during the 2001 election, but says it wasn’t a “big issue” in the campaign.

      Mr Howard said he was incorrectly advised people desperate to enter the country as refugees threw their children into the ocean so naval officers would rescue them and take them to Australia.

      Former Prime Minister John Howard in Sydney in June.Kate Geraghty

      But he again rejected claims the scandal helped him win the election despite the Coalition campaigning heavily on its handling of Australia’s borders.

      “What I regret is that it, in retrospect, it is being given a prominence that it didn’t have,” Mr Howard told ABC 774 on Thursday.

      WA quarantine facility to be built on contaminated land after last-minute switch

      By Hamish Hastie

      The federal government has switched locations for its 1000-bed COVID-19 quarantine facility in Western Australia, abandoning a plan to build it near an airport in Perth’s southern suburbs for a site on contaminated Defence land in the city’s far north.

      The Jandakot Airport site in Perth’s south was announced in July as the preferred location for the $300 million facility but on Thursday federal Finance Minister Simon Birmingham announced it would instead be built three kilometres from the Pearce RAAF base in Bullsbrook on the outer fringe of Perth’s northern metro area.

      Minister for Finance Simon Birmingham.Alex Ellinghausen

      Senator Birmingham said during planning and negotiations it became clear the WA Centre for National Resilience facility couldn’t be delivered efficiently in Jandakot in terms of time and cost.

      “Ultimately, in terms of looking at value for money for taxpayers, as well as the ability to ensure the timely delivery of this project, we’ve decided that Bullsbrook offered a stronger basis to proceed,” he told ABC Perth Radio.

      Get tested, seek help early or risk worse outcome: intensive care specialist

      By Roy Ward

      Sydney intensive care specialist Mark Nicholls has warned that Australians who don’t get tested early for COVID-19 are putting their lives at risk.

      Dr Nicholls told ABC News 24 on Thursday he was concerned about stories of people dying at home from COVID-19 and others not seeking tests or taking days to get a test and spreading the virus.

      Dr Nicholls, the vice-president of the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society, wants people to get tested as soon as they notice symptoms so they get early medical support.

      “I know [Victorian Premier] Daniel Andrews was talking about people walking around in the community for eight days with COVID and affecting other people, but they are causing harm to themselves,” Dr Nicholls said.

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      Australia ‘desperately behind’ world in vaccinating 12-15 year olds: Labor MP

      By Michaela Whitbourn

      Federal Labor MP Mark Butler, the shadow health minister, says Australia is “desperately behind” the world in vaccinating children aged between 12 and 15 and the Prime Minister should tell parents how many children will be vaccinated when COVID restrictions are expected to ease.

      “At the very least he needs to tell parents what percentage of our 12 to 15-year-olds will be fully vaccinated before we move to the next phases in the national plan,” Mr Butler told the ABC’s Patricia Karvelas.

      Labor health spokesman Mark Butler.Alex Ellinghausen

      “We are desperately behind the rest of the world. Canada has fully vaccinated 60 per cent of their 12 to 15-year-olds because they started three months ago. Many European countries and Israel started months ago as well. Yet not one of our 12 to 15-year-olds, 1.2 million of them, are fully vaccinated yet.”

      National cabinet has agreed on vaccination targets of 70 and 80 per cent that will trigger an easing of restrictions across the country, but those targets refer to people aged over 16. The Doherty Institute, whose modelling underpins the plan, has said “we’ve learned from watching countries that have removed all restrictions that there is no ‘freedom day’.”

      Victoria still has shot at COVID zero, says expert, but NSW may not

      By Roy Ward

      Professor Brendan Crabb from the Burnet Institute says Victoria can still return to zero COVID-19 community transmission but Sydney may be too far into its outbreak.

      Professor Crabb said Victoria has two options: stay in lockdown until the state returns to zero cases and have a higher quality of life later in the year, or start leaving lockdown with a high amount of virus in the community.

      Professor Crabb, an infectious diseases expert, told ABC 774 on Thursday afternoon both options required the state to get to a high number of double-vaccinated people and Victoria should aim for zero cases.

      “Victoria only has two options,” Professor Crabb told ABC 774.“One is to live in lockdown for a while with the hope of reaching zero community transmission again and therefore ... living a much freer life, almost a completely free internal [inside Victoria] life.

      ‘You are killing my constituents’: Labor MP lashes government over Afghan visas

      By Michaela Whitbourn

      Federal Labor MP Julian Hill was ejected from the chamber by Speaker Tony Smith this afternoon after he yelled “you are killing my constituents” when Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews rose to answer a question from government ranks about Afghanistan.

      On the way out, Mr Hill, the member for the Victorian seat of Bruce, added:

      There are thousands of Australians and their loved ones who are only in Afghanistan because you haven’t processed their visas for years and now you are leaving them to die.

      The Speaker labelled his behaviour “completely unacceptable”, saying MPs who are asked to leave the chamber “must do so immediately without comment or abuse to anybody”.

      Labor MP Julian Hill.Alex Ellinghausen
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      Modelling suggests vaccination targets do not need to include children: PM

      By Michaela Whitbourn

      You might recall that earlier today West Australian Premier Mark McGowan raised questions about whether children aged 12 to 15 should be included in national vaccination targets that are tied to the staged easing of COVID-19 restrictions across the country.

      ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr has also said his government would explicitly include this age group when making decisions about future restrictions.

      The Doherty Institute’s modelling, which underpins the national plan, talks about vaccination targets of 70 and 80 per cent, which is a reference to people aged 16 and over.

      “The Doherty Institute ... has made it very clear that they have not considered it necessary to include this [12-15] age group in overall vaccination targets, but it does not mean that they shouldn’t be vaccinated. Of course they should be vaccinated,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said in Parliament today.

      “The government will ensure they are vaccinated; I have two daughters aged 12 and 14 and I think it is very important they will be vaccinated. They will be. There are 1.2 million [children] between that age group of 12 and 15 who will need to be vaccinated in that cohort.”

      As Rachel Clun reports, we’ll be hearing more about the plan to vaccinate children aged between 12 and 15 on Friday. Vulnerable children in that age group – First Nations children and those with underlying health conditions – are already being vaccinated.

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