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Australia news LIVE: Sydney records 112 new cases of COVID-19; NSW removalists visited Victoria while infectious

Broede Carmody and Josh Dye
Updated ,first published

The day’s headlines at a glance

By

That’s stumps for today. Thanks for reading. Here’s a recap of the day’s adventures:

  • NSW has recorded 112 new cases of COVID-19 in the community. Premier Gladys Berejiklian says at least 34 of the new cases were in the community while infectious. Meanwhile, there are 68 people with coronavirus in NSW hospitals. Of those, 18 are in intensive care, four of whom are ventilated.
  • Victoria is on high alert after a removalist from Greater Sydney visited Victoria and South Australia while infectious. Separately, two members of a NSW who had a permit to travel to Victoria tested positive, but they were in isolation so are not considered high risk.
  • A South Australian woman died from the rare blood clotting condition a few weeks after having an AstraZeneca vaccination.
  • British billionaire Richard Branson succeeded in his attempt to complete the world’s first fully crewed private space flight.
  • Australia has finally withdrawn all troops from Afghanistan, 20 years after the war started.
  • And Italy defeated England to win their first European Championship since 1968. In Melbourne, Italian soccer fans went nuts celebrating the triumph.

We’ll be back again first thing tomorrow. Arrivederci!

They really did go nuts!Joe Armao

Sydney families determined to get through long lockdown

By Laura Chung

Families across south-western Sydney are preparing for a long lockdown as they come out in force to get COVID-19 tests and adhere to strict stay-at-home orders.

Akram Abdal, Maryam Tshikha and their four children will spend the next few weeks inside their Bossley Park home: playing, calling friends and family and only going outside for essential shopping or a walk around the block.

Maryam Tshikha (left) and her husband Akram Abdal (right) with four of their five children, Oniel (second from left), Thomas (third from left), Charbel (third from right) and Marita (second from right) in their backyard in Bossley Park.Kate Geraghty

The family arrived in Australia in 2016 having fled Al Hasakah, in Syria, during the war there.

But just as they survived then, they are determined to get through COVID-19.

“When it was time of war, we can’t go outside ... we have lived with such a thing [before],” Mr Abdal said.

Read more here.

Fortress Australia won’t deter tourists: minister

By Chris Barrett

Singapore: Australia has plummeted from international standard bearer to a laggard with its approach to the pandemic but the nation’s beleaguered tourism industry is being told the good times will eventually return.

Speaking today in Singapore, the first stop of his tour of Vietnam, Japan, South Korea and the United States, Trade and Tourism Minister Dan Tehan has predicted international tourists will be back in as great a number as before when borders reopen. That is despite other parts of the world gaining an advantage with faster vaccination rollouts allowing travel to resume.

An empty arrival terminal at Sydney Airport.Brook Mitchell

Mr Tehan is in south-east Asia as the Delta coronavirus variant threatens to overwhelm health systems across the region. With Sydney in its third week of lockdown, Australia has attracted renewed attention from abroad for the closed-border tactics to combating the virus that have resulted in more than 30,000 of its own citizens being unable to return home.

The UK’s Financial Times on the weekend published an editorial on the “fatal flaws in Australia’s hermit nation strategy”, namely the country’s failure to match the pace of other developed countries in procuring vaccines.

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Is working from home better or worse for productivity?

By Nathanael Cooper

With the proportion of people working from home during the peak of the coronavirus pandemic growing from 5 per cent to 40 per cent, there’s a renewed focus on the impacts and benefits of staying in the home office.

The chairman of Australia’s Productivity Commission says higher rates of working from home have beneficial impacts on workers and are unlikely to harm the economy.

With workers saving more than an hour each day by removing the commute, businesses are benefiting from staff working an additional 13 minutes on average each day, while workers have more time for care-giving and personal activities.

While councils and governments are urging staff to return to the office when restrictions have eased to a point where it is possible, some studies show the workforce is unlikely to return to pre-pandemic levels of office work.

Today on Please Explain, senior economics writer Jessica Irvine joins Nathanael Cooper to discuss how working from home has impacted productivity.

How is Sydney’s outbreak tracking against Melbourne’s second wave?

By Craig Butt

The rising daily COVID-19 case numbers in Sydney is leading to inevitable comparisons with the start of Melbourne’s second wave from around this time last year.

The data on the two is worth a look, but there are some key things to note about it.

The graph below compares the seven-day average of local cases in Melbourne at the start of the state’s second wave with the current Sydney outbreak.

As with any data, keep in mind that whenever two areas are being compared over different time periods, there are some important caveats to take into account.

‘Doesn’t add up’: Coalition senator criticises Sydney lockdown, urges higher risk tolerance

By

Federal LNP senator for Queensland Matt Canavan has criticised NSW for ordering Greater Sydney into lockdown.

Mr Canavan made the case that extended lockdowns have a crushing cost on people and governments need to adopt a higher risk tolerance.

“I don’t think we are correctly balancing here the costs and benefits of lockdowns. They’re not the preferred tool of virologists,” Mr Canavan told the ABC on Monday afternoon.

“I think we have got to put the responsibility back on people. And those who are vulnerable will feel like they don’t want to be exposed. They can obviously make the choice to stay home. But to impose a police state on everybody over a year after the virus [when] we know a lot more about it [and] we have a lot more treatments, it doesn’t add up.”

Pressed by host Patricia Karvelas about the number of people - including some young people - in hospital, Mr Canavan said the community must come to accept some deaths from coronavirus as being normal.

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Australian troops finally leave Afghanistan after 20 years

By Anthony Galloway

The Australian Defence Force has officially announced the end of Australia’s 20-year campaign in Afghanistan.

ADF chief Angus Campbell confirmed on Facebook that all ADF personnel have departed Afghanistan, bringing the nation’s longest war to a close.

“Over the past 20 years, some 39,000 of #YourADF men and women served in Afghanistan, alongside military, law enforcement, civilian and aid partners from more than 50 countries,” he wrote.

ADF Chief Angus Campbell.Alex Ellinghausen

“As we mark the end of our military operations in Afghanistan, we acknowledge and thank all Defence personnel for their continued commitment to supporting our operations in order to achieve our mission of defending Australia and our national interests.

“Tragically, 41 ADF personnel died on operations in Afghanistan. Their bravery, dedication to service, and ultimate sacrifice will never be forgotten. Many more of our people returned home with lasting physical and mental wounds, sadly some we have since lost. We will continue our commitment to support our people and their families.

“To all ADF personnel, thank you for your service.”

New venue alerts for NSW

By Mary Ward

NSW Health has advised the public of a number of new venues of concern, largely in south-west and western Sydney. Anyone who was at the following locations at these times is a close contact and should immediately get tested and self-isolate for 14 days:

  • Australian Visa Now in Fairfield, Monday through Saturday last week from 9.30am to 4.30pm
  • Law and Order Office Work in Fairfield, Monday through Saturday last week from 9.30am to 4.30pm
  • Belmore Medical Centre last Monday from 10am to 11am
  • Mrs Fields within Roselands Shopping Centre on July 1 from 10.30am to 10.45am, July 3 from 7am to 7.10am and last Monday from 10.30am to 10.40am (in addition to existing times)

People who were at the following venues at these times are considered casual contacts and must immediately get a test then isolate until they receive a negative result.

  • Boulevarde Pharmacy at Fairfield Heights on Saturday from 9am to 10am
  • Babylon Bakery at Fairfield Heights on Saturday from 12.45pm to 12.50pm
  • McGraths Hill BMX track on Wednesday from 11am to 1pm
  • Windsor Riverview Shopping Centre on Wednesday from 1.30pm to 3pm
  • Lazezza Kebab Bakery Grills at Mortdale on Wednesday from 2.15pm to 3pm
  • PRD Real Estate at Liverpool on Wednesday or Friday from 9am to 5.30pm, or Saturday from 8.30am to 9.15am
  • Asal Sweet Patisserie at Merrylands on Thursday from 4pm to 5pm
  • Bondi Junction Australia Post, within Eastgate, on Friday from 3.50pm to 4pm
  • Cafe at Lewers at Emu Plains on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday from 9am to 9.30am
  • Emu Plains Woolworths, within the Lennox Shopping Centre, on Tuesday from 4pm to 4.30pm
  • Cons Continental Deli, within Glenbrook Village, on Tuesday from 1pm to 1.30pm
  • The Takeaway Joint at Glenbrook on Tuesday from 1pm to 1.30pm
  • Penrith Homemaker Centre on Tuesday from 3pm to 3.30pm
  • Grey Gums Bottlemart at Jamistown on Tuesday from 3pm to 3.30pm
  • Tins and Wood at Penrith on Wednesday from 5.20pm to 5.40pm
  • Kemps Street Caltex on Thursday from 4.15pm to 4.45pm
  • Woolworths Fairfield Heights on Thursday from 5.40pm to 5.50pm and 6pm to 7pm, as well as Saturday from 12.40pm to 12.55pm (in addition to existing times)
  • Pyrmont Coles on July 5 from 1pm to 1.20pm (in addition to existing times)
  • Kareela Coles on Wednesday from 1pm to 10pm (in addition to existing times)

In addition, anyone at these locations at these time should monitor for symptoms and get a test if they develop.

  • Hoxton Park Bunnings on Thursday from 11.10am to 12.15pm
  • The Irish Convenience Store at Bondi Junction on Saturday from 9.55am to 11.05am

The Sydney suburbs with the most cases

By Ben Grubb

We’ve created a map which drills down further on where Sydney’s outbreak grew over the weekend.

It shows local COVID-19 cases recorded on Saturday, July 10, and Sunday, July 11.

The cases are shown by postcode and sometimes cover several suburbs. For example, postcode 2165 (which includes Fairfield, Fairfield East, Fairfield Heights and Fairfield West) recorded 57 cases. Meanwhile, 2176 in Sydney’s south-west (Abbotsbury, Bossley Park, Edensor Park, Greenfield Park, Prairiewood, St Johns Park and Wakeley) recorded 26 cases over both days.

Postcode 2164 (Smithfield, Smithfield West, Wetherill Park and Woodpark) had 22 cases; 2196 (Punchbowl and Roselands) had seven; 2171 (Cecil Hills, Horningsea Park, Hoxton Park, West Hoxton) recorded four; and 2756 (a suburb that encompasses several western Sydney suburbs) recorded three.

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Victoria ‘very confident’ of containing positive cases

By David Estcourt

Victoria’s COVID-19 response commander Jeroen Weimar says he’s confident authorities will be able to contain Victoria’s two new cases in a family that returned from NSW to their home in Melbourne’s outer north-western suburbs.

“I’m very confident with the City of Hume family,” he said.

“We have a very, very small window to chase ... it will be really important to understand whether they’ve had any movements outside of the house [and we] will have that today.

“I’m pretty confident that we’ve got a really good start on this one and I think we’ll run that one very hard.”

He was not as confident about the removalists, though, saying he hopes tracing data collected by the movers was accurate.

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