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As it happened: Victorian cases rise by 357 with five deaths, WHO records biggest single-day increase in coronavirus cases; Australian death toll stands at 145

Michaela Whitbourn and Roy Ward
Updated ,first published

Summary

  • Victoria recorded 357 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday and the death of five people. It took the national death toll to 145.
  • NSW recorded 15 new coronavirus cases on Saturday, eight of which were linked to a cluster of cases at the Thai Rock restaurant in Wetherill Park, in the Fairfield local government area. Sixty cases are now linked to that outbreak.
  • South Australia responded to the outbreak of COVID-19 cases in Victoria on Friday by announcing tough new restrictions preventing any person, including residents, from returning to the state from Victoria unless they are an essential traveller. Residents have been urged to return to the state by midnight on Tuesday, when the ban takes effect.
  • The NSW Supreme Court will rule at midday on Sunday on whether it will grant a prohibition order over a planned Black Lives Matter protest in Sydney on Tuesday.
  • There are 15.7 million coronavirus cases globally, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally, and more than 638,652 deaths.
Pinned post from 3.57pm on Jul 25, 2020
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'Like drowning': Victoria unveils graphic coronavirus advertising campaign

By Michael Fowler

The Victorian government has stepped up its coronavirus advertising to focus on real-life stories of suffering, similar to smoking and road toll campaigns.

As the state braces for scores more deaths in the coming weeks after five people died on Saturday, the government has released multi-language advertisements for television, radio and social media illustrating the devastating effect coronavirus can have on families and younger people.

Michael, who features in Victoria's new coronavirus ad, said the virus was 'like drowning' before entering an induced coma for 72 days.

In one, Michael, a middle-aged coronavirus patient, details how doctors believed he was going to die as he spent 72 days in an induced coma in hospital. Michael explains that while he was asleep, his wife contracted coronavirus and likely passed it on to her elderly mother who soon died.

“It was like drowning," Michael says of the virus.

"COVID is real, it is very real."

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New cases connected to several Melbourne outbreaks

By Tom Cowie

UPDATED: There are five cases of COVID-19 linked to a KFC store in Truganina in Melbourne's west, among several new outbreaks outlined in the latest information from the Health Department.

Ten cases have also been connected to a Star Track facility in Laverton, also west of Melbourne.

Meanwhile, there are outbreaks of seven cases at Bingo Recycling in West Melbourne and five at Probe Group in the CBD.

There are two cases linked separately to the Grand Chancellor Hotel in the city and D’Orsogna Meats in Mickleham, north of Melbourne.

Single cases in staff members have been identified in two new aged care homes: Martin Luther Homes in The Basin, and Bupa Traralgon.

Record case numbers in every global region - Reuters

By Jane Wardell

Almost 40 countries have reported record single-day increases in coronavirus infections over the past week, around double the number that did so the previous week, according to a Reuters tally showing a pick-up in the pandemic in every region of the world.

The rate of cases has been increasing not only in countries like the United States, Brazil and India, which have dominated global headlines with large outbreaks, but in Australia, Japan, Hong Kong, Bolivia, Sudan, Ethiopia, Bulgaria, Belgium, Uzbekistan and Israel, among others.

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Many countries, especially those where officials eased earlier social distancing lockdowns, are experiencing a second peak more than a month after recording their first.

"We will not be going back to the 'old normal'. The pandemic has already changed the way we live our lives," World Health Organisation (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said this week. "We're asking everyone to treat the decisions about where they go, what they do and who they meet with as life-and-death decisions – because they are."

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Colac locals doing their bit as town battles outbreak

By Nine News Melbourne
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Street dreams: a shout-out to suburbia

By Jamila Rizvi

The pandemic forced me to accept what I already knew. That the so-called Australian dream is something I never sought but nonetheless adore. That there’s a reason our country is best known in the UK for a parochial little soap opera set in Ramsay Street.

And that the singularly pleasant by-product of being told to go home and stay there has been a further closeness with our neighbours.

I framed our family’s move to the suburbs in what I was giving up. I never paid much thought to what we’d gain.Getty Images

While furious at the state of the world and fearful for friends near and far, it is the friends literally closest to home to whom I’ve turned. As Melbourne locked down for the second time this year, text messages flew rapidly between the neighbours. We delegated the job of checking in on older people living alone, offered to pick up groceries for one another, and planned socially distanced front-lawn exercise.

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Smith's advice for the Broncos as Storm settle in for the long haul

By Phil Lutton

Melbourne captain Cameron Smith has paid tribute to the resilience of his side – as well as put an arm around the struggling Broncos – in the wake of another Storm win that has them five from five since being forced to leave their Victorian base.

Storm coach Craig Bellamy said they felt "like lepers" at times when they were looking for a new home due to COVID-19 border restrictions as the virus forced a dramatic shake-up of the NRL competition.

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They have since settled on the Sunshine Coast, but Smith made it clear it didn't feel anything like a holiday camp, especially with players having family and friends in a lockdown environment in Melbourne, which has been at the centre of a fresh COVID-19 spike.

"It's a pretty difficult situation that everyone is in at the moment," Smith said after the 46-8 win over Brisbane on Friday night. "Half the squad has family and friends up here at the moment, that's great. Half the squad don't. They're back in Victoria at the moment. It's a dire situation down there.

"I've seen a couple of things written and spoken about us being on the Sunshine Coast and how nice it is but, at the end of the day, it's not home. We enjoy coming to Queensland, but we'd much rather be in our home in Victoria."

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Shattered illusions: how the bubble of American exceptionalism is bursting

By Amelia Lester

Solicitors are not permitted, boomed the voice out of loudspeakers every few minutes the morning I arrived at Los Angeles International Airport 20 years ago. What do these people have against lawyers, I wondered. But then, the ’90s had been the golden age of lawyer jokes; banning solicitors didn’t seem the worst idea in the world.

In my hand at baggage collection was an American $20 bill procured from a currency exchange in Sydney before getting on the flight, with which I planned to buy a bottle of water. (This was back when passbooks, not PayWave, were how most people banked.) “Don’t wave money around,” whispered my world-weary brother, who’d been living in the States for a year. I still remember the jolt that ran through me, and the lesson I carried forward: America was a place where you needed to be alert. It was August 2001.

Schools are becoming a political football. Parents, especially those who work outside the home, are at breaking point.Getty Images

I’ve been thinking about that day at the airport recently, after hearing a friend’s observation that America is not a rich country, but rather a poor country with a lot of rich people in it. Suddenly a lot of things made sense.

Why renewing your driver’s licence here is a Hobbesian obstacle course more difficult than even the trickiest parallel park. Why your healthcare is tied to the benevolence of your employer. And why, if US states were countries, they would, at the time of writing, make up 13 of the world’s worst COVID-19 outbreaks – alongside Panama, Kazakhstan, Kuwait.

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Tennis Australia settles on plan for Australian Open with fewer spectators

By Dennis Passa

Australian Open organisers have settled on a plan to host the 2021 tournament complete with bio-security and fewer spectators.

Tennis Australia chief executive Craig Tiley will be looking at the running of both the US Open and delayed French Open to help plan contingencies for the first grand slam tournament of 2021. Tiley says the tournament has already decided on how the event will shape up in January — reduced seating due to social distancing, players in a secure bio-security “bubble” and the likelihood of no overseas spectators.

The World Health Organisation didn’t declare the coronavirus a pandemic until March 12, about six weeks after Novak Djokovic and Sofia Kenin lifted their respective men’s and women’s singles trophy before capacity crowds of 15,000 at Rod Laver Arena.

Tennis Australia boss Craig Tiley is banking on fewer spectators.Luis Enrique Ascui

If current planning continues, there’ll be only half that many spectators in Melbourne Park’s main show court in 2021, and any overseas players who win the title will have spent some time in quarantine on their arrival in Australia, been tested for COVID-19, stay at one of the official bio-secure tournament hotels and travel to the tournament site in sealed transport.

Think you're spending more time in bed? You're not alone

By Hanna Mills Turbet

If you think you have been going to bed earlier than ever, you are not alone.

Conversely, if you have found the clock nudging midnight before you crawl beneath the sheets, you're also in good company.

Brunswick couple Sian Brownlow and Alex Bowden have been getting plenty of sleep during the COVID-19 lockdown. Penny Stephens

Many of us have found our sleep patterns have altered during COVID-19 lockdowns but one constant remains: most of us are spending more time in bed.

Sleep research conducted in locked-down communities across Europe, America and India suggests COVID-19 has given many of us more time to luxuriate between the sheets.

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WTA Finals among China tournaments cancelled in blow to women's tennis

By Christopher Clarey

In a season full of foiled plans and economic peril, the WTA Tour suffered its biggest blow on Friday (AEST) when it was forced to cancel its remaining tournaments in 2020 in China, including its lucrative tour championships: the WTA Finals in Shenzhen.

The cancellations, confirmed by a tennis official who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorised to speak publicly on the matter, came two weeks after a Chinese government sports agency recommended that the country call off most international sporting events for the remainder of the year because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Ashleigh Barty with the trophy after her victory in the WTA Finals in Shenzhen last year. This year's tournament has been cancelled.Getty Images

Steve Simon, the WTA's chief executive, had expressed hope that China's government and its tennis officials would allow the tournaments to proceed, just as it was allowing certain winter sports test events to go on before the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.

Negotiations proved unsuccessful, however, and the women's tour will now have to cancel all seven events scheduled in October and November in China, which has rapidly become one the tour's major markets and a key source of revenue.

The New York Times

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