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The Walkley Foundation announces 2021 mid-year winners
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dishonest stories
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Guardian Australia wins Walkley for revealing alleged racism on set of Neighbours
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Last modified on Thu 3 Jun 2021 17.12 EDT
Good morning – two ‘fleeting’ cases of Covid have been declared false positives amid
Ash Barty retired injured from the French Open
and a new documentary is looking at the psychic toll of the
climate crisis. This is Imogen Dewey with the main stories to see out your week on Friday 4 June.
Two suspected “fleeting” transmission cases of coronavirus that were part of the reason for Melbourne’s lockdown extension have been declared false positives. Federal and Victorian governments are also at odds over the best use of a
proposed quarantine facility: the state is looking to house high-risk travellers otherwise in hotel quarantine; the commonwealth wants to boost number of returning Australians. In Melbourne, renters struggling in Covid lockdown are urging the government to bring back
The Guardian Australia’s YouTube channel contains a wide range of hateful and homophobic comments which the media organisation has failed to remove.
The revelations came after The Guardian's Media Correspondent Amanda Meade, through consultation with Kevin Rudd, published an article attempting to blame Sky News Australia for comments YouTube users left on its channel.
“Taking cheap shots at us, using the hateful rants of people who should not be amplified, to try to damage your perceived commercial or political enemies, well, I think that’s almost as low as the hate speech itself,” Sky News host Chris Kenny said.
Mr Kenny also revealed that a quick search on The Guardian’s YouTube page uncovered comments which were “hateful, homophobic, and otherwise offensive”.
The comments – which included remarks about “the gay agenda” and comparing homosexuality to pedophilia and beastiality – were still live on The Guardian Australia’s YouTube page at the time of p