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As it happened: Victoria and NSW records six new COVID-19 cases; Daniel Andrews faces pressure to end Melbourne lockdown; Australian death toll stands at 904

Rachael Dexter and David Estcourt
Updated ,first published

Summary

The day in review

By Rachael Dexter

That brings us to the end of another day on the coronavirus blog. We'll be back tomorrow morning with all the day's COVID-19 news, right here.

Here's where we've ended the day in news:

National

  • Tomorrow's scheduled National Cabinet meeting has been postponed until next week, with technical issues with the Prime Minister's plane meaning he is unable to leave North

    Queensland in time. National cabinet was due to discuss issues around state and national borders, and the federal budget.

    Final negotiations for plans for repatriation flight for stranded Australians overseas may be stalled due to the delay after it was revealed that the federal government poised to reserve a quarantine centre in the Northern Territory for about a thousand people a month.

Victoria: How many active and 'mystery' cases are in your postcode?

By Craig Butt

There are 175 active coronavirus cases in Victoria, the lowest number of active cases statewide for almost four months, based on data released by the VDepartment of Health and Human Services.

The last time active case numbers were this low was on June 25, when there were 183.

This map shows the number of active coronavirus cases in each Melbourne postcode. You can use the controls at the top-right of the map to zoom in to your postcode or zoom out to show all of Victoria.

As of Thursday afternoon, 66 of the state's 694 populated postcodes had at least one active coronavirus case, down from 73 seven days ago.

WA reports five new cases in returned travellers

By Cameron Myles

Western Australia has reported five new COVID-19 cases, all in returned travellers.

The Department of Health said three females and two males aged between 25-30 had tested positive to the disease.

All were in hotel quarantine and had travelled to Perth from India, Nepal or Brazil.

WA now has a total of 709 confirmed cases of COVID-19, with 24 active cases, while 676 people have recovered from the virus.

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Breaking: National cabinet postponed

By Angus Livingstone

This news just in from the Prime Minister's Office: tomorrow's scheduled meeting of National Cabinet has been postponed until next week.

Technical issues with the Prime Minister's plane mean he is unable to leave North Queensland in time to make Friday's scheduled national cabinet meeting.

A government spokesman said a replacement plane has been called up, but the meeting will be moved to some time next week instead.

National cabinet was due to discuss issues around state and national borders, and the federal budget.

Hong Kong and Singapore announce travel bubble plans

By Reuters

Hong Kong and Singapore will set up a travel bubble, the two cities announced on Thursday, as they moved to re-establish overseas travel links and lift the hurdle of quarantine for visiting foreigners.

Hong Kong's Commerce Secretary Edward Yau and Singapore's Transport Minister Ong Ye Kung said travellers under the scheme would need to get negative COVID-19 test results and travel on dedicated flights.

A man looking out Victoria Harbour in the very quiet and empty Tsim Sha Tsui Promenade in Hong Kong. Getty Images

Further details, including the launch date, will be fleshed out in coming weeks, they said.

"It is a safe, careful but significant step forward to revive air travel, and provide a model for future collaboration with other parts of the world," Singapore's Ong said.

Shepparton goes quiet as community sweats on test results

By Benjamin Preiss

Shepparton is a city on edge as nervous residents wait to learn whether the coronavirus has spread beyond a handful of confirmed cases.

Many cafes, restaurants and shops were closed on Thursday, while hundreds of people were self-isolating or waiting on test results.

An empty Maude Mall in the centre of Shepparton on Thursday. Simon Schluter

The city’s Maude Street mall was quiet, with barely a pedestrian in sight. Around the corner, the Lemon Tree Cafe had closed after it was confirmed a customer who visited the business had tested positive for COVID-19.

The owner of neabry Focus Cards and Gifts, Peter Dunbabin, said many businesses were required to shut because their staff were considered close contacts.

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Hunt says Victoria's active cases, historic mystery cases not relevant to lockdowns

By Rachael Dexter

The fact Victoria has a higher number of active and historic cases than NSW is not a relevant argument to keep Victoria in stricter lock down, according to federal Health Minister Greg Hunt.

Premier Daniel Andrews again defended the harsher lock down measures in his state compared to those in NSW - despite both states recording similar daily new numbers - by pointing to Victoria’s backlog of active cases, and historic mystery cases.

Health Minister Greg Hunt says Victoria's daily new cases are what should dictate easing restrictions.Alex Ellinghausen

“We still remain in a different position to New South Wales and that's evidenced in lots of different ways: the history of our pandemic, all those chains of transmission, but most notably the fact that they've got 40 active cases and we're at 175,” he told reporters earlier today.

“It’s just a fact that South Wales has not had 4278 mystery cases across the pandemic. As it’s unfolded in New South Wales they've not had the virus get into large families, high risk workplaces and that bouncing back and forth. I’m not saying it hasn’t happened at all in NSW, but it certainly has not been a feature.”

Melbourne's 5km limit could go to 20km, preparations for ADF to step up 'ring of steel'

By Michael Fowler and Benjamin Preiss

Melbourne's five-kilometre movement limit could be increased to 20 kilometres and ambitious thresholds for lifting coronavirus restrictions might be revised when the Victorian government updates its pandemic road map on Sunday.

Urgent testing of thousands of Shepparton residents will continue for days, but Premier Daniel Andrews said the city's COVID-19 outbreak, which remained at three cases on Thursday, would likely not prevent regional Victoria from significantly easing restrictions on Sunday.

Deputy Chief Health Officer Allen Cheng offered hope on the five-kilometre restriction being lifted.Justin McManus

Mr Andrews has requested more Defence Force troops to help bolster checkpoints separating Melbourne and the regions.

"If we can toughen up even further those border checkpoints to keep Melbourne and regional Victoria separated, well that will give us some options in regional Victoria that we otherwise wouldn't have," Mr Andrews said.

Chadstone cleaner also didn't tell truth to contact tracers: Deputy CHO

By Rachael Dexter

A cleaner who brought the coronavirus to Chadstone Shopping Centre in Melbourne's south-east did not tell contact tracers they worked there, Victoria's Deputy Chief Health Officer Allen Cheng confirmed today.

The outbreak that has now spread to Shepparton in the state's north started when the infected cleaner from Frankston spread the virus to Chadstone Shopping Centre.

Combined, the linked Chadstone, Frankston, Kilmore and Shepparton outbreaks total 59 people so far.

Professor Cheng outlined a timeline today at the daily Victorian press conference that revealed there was a two day gap before authorities realised the cleaner from the Frankston family cluster had worked at the shopping centre where the manager of a butcher had already tested positive.

"It was only when we detected another case case at Chadstone and interviewed that person that, it was found that the person at Frankston had worked there [Chadstone] as a cleaner and that wasn't volunteered to us by the Frankston person."

It's the second confirmed case of someone within the major outbreak network not telling the whole truth to contact tracers, after an infected Melbourne truck driver - who was a close contact of a Chadstone case - travelled to Shepparton, which was not disclosed to authorities until nearly two weeks later.

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Repatriation deal will bring stranded Aussies home via NT quarantine camp

By

Political reporter Katina Curtis has got some more detail on the repatriation plan for stranded Australians overseas that we mentioned a few hours ago in the blog:

The flights for Australians could start as soon as next week with the federal government poised to reserve a quarantine centre in the Northern Territory for about a thousand people a month.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison is in the final stages of a deal to bring Australians stranded overseas to quarantine in Howard Springs on the outskirts of Darwin.

Qantas flights will run repatriation flights for Australians to quarantine in the Northern Territory.

The Department of Foreign Affairs, Home Affairs and Defence have been working on the deal for months.

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