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Page 21 - ஞாயிற்றுக்கிழமை வாழ்நாள் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Australian Govt Says No Plans to Re-Open Border Until Mid-2022 Despite Mounting Pressure

Australian Govt Says No Plans to Re-Open Border Until Mid-2022 Despite Mounting Pressure MELBOURNE Australia is sticking to plans to start re-opening to the rest of the world only from the middle of next year, officials said on Sunday, resisting mounting pressure to end the closure of international borders. In March 2020, Australia closed its borders to non-nationals and non-residents and has since been allowing only limited international arrivals, mainly citizens returning from abroad. “All the way through we will be guided by the medical advice,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said at a televised briefing. “We will be guided by the economic advice.”

Australia Sticks by Plan to Reopen Border in the Middle of 2022

Send Australia is sticking to plans to start re-opening to the rest of the world only from the middle of next year, officials said on Sunday, resisting mounting pressure to end the closure of international borders. In March 2020, Australiaclosed its borders to non-nationals and non-residents and has since been allowing only limited international arrivals, mainly citizens returning from abroad. “All the way through we will be guided by the medical advice,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said at a televised briefing. “We will be guided by the economic advice.” Earlier in the day, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg told the Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) that the medical advice to keep the borders closed had ‘served us very well through this crisis’.

Keep tough bail laws, says police union, as Greens try to wind them back

Keep tough bail laws, says police union, as Greens try to wind them back We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Normal text size Advertisement Victoria’s powerful police union has strongly opposed weakening bail laws that have helped contribute to an explosion in the state’s prison population, and has demanded both sides of politics declare their position on the issue ahead of next year’s state election. The call comes as the Greens prepare to table a bill this month aimed at winding back laws that were strengthened in response to the Bourke Street massacre, but which have led to record rates of imprisonment and a blowout in prison spending.

Coronavirus Australia: Government MPs revolt against border closures

Advertisement A groundswell of opposition to Australia’s protracted border closure is brewing among Morrison government MPs, with city-based politicians leading a push to reopen faster and give vaccinated people more freedom to travel. Pushing for Australia’s border to reopen sooner: Liberal MPs Jason Falinski, Tim Wilson and Dave Sharma. Credit: Leaked audio recordings also reveal Victoria’s Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton told healthcare workers last month the country must at some point abandon its Fortress Australia approach to COVID-19 and “make a call on letting it run” in order to reopen for tourists and international students. Those comments echo remarks by former deputy chief medical officer Nick Coatsworth, revealed yesterday by the

Rachel was jailed for stealing an ice-cream In Victoria In 2020

Rachel was jailed for stealing an ice-cream. In Victoria. In 2020 We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Save Normal text size Advertisement Last year, Rachel was jailed for six days for stealing an ice-cream — a $3.50 Bubble O’Bill from a St Kilda convenience store. It was the kind of minor transgression that might once have prompted a stern reprimand from a police officer or a magistrate, but this was 2020 and Rachel was remanded because she’d committed an indictable offence while already on bail. So under laws that Premier Daniel Andrews had spruiked as the toughest in the country, she spent two days in the custody centre and four in Dame Phyllis Frost prison in Ravenhall.

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