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WA Premier's proposal for post-COVID border control sparks backlash

Western Australia Premier Mark McGowan has hurriedly walked back a proposal to extend the state's border controls beyond the COVID-19 crisis, as a controversy erupted ahead of next Saturday's election.

Earlier today, as Mr McGowan cast an early ballot, he said the state's hard border controls had helped reduce drug usage in Western Australia.

Measures such as vehicle searches, airport screenings, and the G2G pass are being considered by Police Commissioner Chris Dawson to help stem the flow of drugs into the state.

READ MORE: WA Opposition Leader concedes defeat weeks before election day

"On the border, we have staff who check for bananas and avocados, surely we can have people there checking for meth as well," Mr McGowan said.

The backlash was swift and brutal, with online comments flooding social media condemning the notion.

Opposition leader Zak Kirkup, who previously conceded the Liberal Party will not be able to make up the ground to win next week's election, quickly latched on to the popular premier's comments.

"Suggesting we are going to go further than that and treat every person entering WA as a potential meth trafficker is an immense overreach and something that I don't support," he said.

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The Business Council of Australia has said restrictions have already cost the Australian economy $170 billion.

Hours after his initial comments, Mr McGowan walked his comments back.

"Obviously the G2G pass will end when the pandemic ends, but what has been effective is having police at the Eucla and Kununarra border to check for meth and heroin," he said.

Biden Pressured as Migrant Numbers Swell

President Biden is facing pressure from all sides as migration swells at the southern border — posing one of the first major policy tests for his administration.

Progressives have hit Biden officials over reopening a housing facility for young migrants used briefly during the Trump administration. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and others argue the facilities are inhumane and represent a step backward for the new administration, which has made a point to distance itself from the Trump era on immigration in particular.

Conservatives, meanwhile, say Biden’s approach has encouraged increased migration to the southern border, with former President Trump joining the chorus of critics in a speech on Sunday at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).

But Biden officials and immigration advocates are urging patience, arguing the new administration will need time to make meaningful changes to a system that was upended over the last four years.

“Putting in place policies to manage the situation in an orderly way is absolutely the correct approach, and I think they’ve done everything they can to communicate clearly and unambiguously about the direction they’re headed and what it’s going to take to get there,” said Tom Jawetz, vice president of immigration policy at the left-leaning Center for American Progress.

Biden met virtually with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador on Monday, and the two discussed the situation at the border. At a White House press briefing that same day, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas asked for patience, saying the Biden administration inherited a deep well of problems.

“It takes time to build out of the depths of cruelty that the administration before us established,” Mayorkas said. “What we are seeing now at the border is the immediate result of the dismantlement of the system and the time that it takes to rebuild it virtually from scratch.”

Biden campaigned against Trump’s immigration policies, and he moved swiftly to halt construction of the border wall and rescind policies that prevented many migrants from entering or remaining in the United States. But the new president is quickly finding that immigration remains a difficult issue to solve, particularly amid a global pandemic.

Customs and Border Protection reported an increase in individuals attempting to cross the southern border in January, averaging about 3,000 arrests per day, compared with almost 30,000 for the whole month last year. Hundreds of unaccompanied children have crossed the border daily in February, straining the government’s resources.

Mayorkas, however, disputed that there was a “crisis,” even as the administration has urged asylum-seekers not to come to the border right now and has been forced to reopen a Texas facility for young migrants to avoid crowding during the pandemic.

“We are not saying don’t come. We are saying don’t come now,” Mayorkas said at Monday’s press briefing.

Mayorkas also said the administration would retain a Trump-era policy that cited public health laws to turn away or deport asylum-seekers amid the pandemic.

“The fact of the matter is that families and single adults are indeed being returned under the COVID-19 restrictions,” he said, calling the move an obligation “in the service of public health.”

Allies of the Biden administration have echoed the Homeland Security secretary’s rhetoric calling for patience, saying it will take time to get the necessary infrastructure in place domestically to handle the flow of migrants and to make planned investments in the Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras to address root causes of migration.

Officials have pointed to comprehensive immigration legislation that is percolating in Congress as a way to make significant changes, though they acknowledged finding Republican support in a 50-50 Senate could be difficult.

“I think a lot of the focal point is going to be on legislation but so much to do on the administrative side,” said Sergio Gonzales, executive director of the Immigration Hub, an advocacy group.

Mayorkas on Monday pledged to allow those separated under Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy to reunite and remain in the U.S. if they so choose.

“Our overarching goal is, of course, to be as humane as the law provides, to be as restorative as the law enables us to be to bring justice to these families,” he said.

Trump spent four years reshaping the immigration system to limit the flow of both legal and illegal immigrants. The former president changed asylum rules, restricted travel from certain countries, implemented a “zero tolerance” policy that separated families amid heightened enforcement at the border and diverted funds to construct a border wall. During the pandemic, Trump imposed restrictions on the issuance of green cards and temporary work visas.

Biden has lifted the green card restrictions, and he scrapped Trump’s “remain in Mexico” policy, replacing it with a system that has now opened three ports of entry where asylum-seekers can enter to the U.S. to await their hearing date.

“As more migrants catch wind of the reimplementation of ‘catch-and-release,’ the surge on our border will be unimaginable,” House Homeland Security Committee ranking member John Katko (R-N.Y.) said when Biden implemented those changes.

Biden’s decision to unwind many of Trump’s policies immediately upon taking office won him plaudits from his own party, but he now faces calls from some progressives to go further and completely overhaul the immigration system by dissolving Immigration and Customs Enforcement and ending the use of private detention facilities.

The Biden administration drew fire last week from progressives for reopening a government facility in Carrizo Springs, Texas, to house up to 700 migrants ages 13 to 17. The facility was open for roughly one month during the Trump administration.

The White House was quick to point out that it was not separating children from their parents as had been done during the previous administration, but the use of migrant facilities for teenagers still prompted criticism from Ocasio-Cortez and others who pointed to Biden’s repeated criticism on the campaign trail of Trump’s treatment of young migrants.

Biden’s initial steps have also provided a reliable line of attack for Republicans, who have been quick to argue that the president’s swift reversal of Trump’s hard-line policies has all but invited migrants to try and enter the United States illegally.

Trump used his CPAC speech to blast Biden’s immigration views in particular, echoing his rhetoric of the 2016 campaign by claiming the new administration’s policies were encouraging “some of the most evil people on the planet.”

“We can’t afford the problems of the world, as much as we’d love to. We’d love to help. But we can’t do that,” Trump said. “So they’re all coming because of promises and foolish words.”

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Authoritarian Bukele Wins Control of El Salvador

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) — Populist President Nayib Bukele appeared Monday to have won control of El Salvador’s unicameral congress, ending a two-year standoff with legislators of the old parties that have dominated politics in the Central American country since the end of the 1980-1992 civil war.

Bukele, 39, celebrated, writing, “Our people have waited 40 years for this.”

A preliminary count of about 80% of votes from Sunday’s elections showed Bukele’s New Ideas party and a coalition partner won several times as many votes as the established political parties, the conservative National Republican Alliance and the leftist Farabundo Marti Liberation Front. Exit polls suggested his party could win 53 of the 84 seats in the Legislative Assembly.

“His (Bukele’s) victory reflects how much anger most Salvadorans feel towards the country’s two discredited and moribund political parties, which had their chance to govern but failed,” wrote Michael Shifter, president of the Washington-based think tank Inter-American Dialogue.

Bukele has blamed congress for blocking his efforts in everything from controlling crime to managing the coronavirus pandemic. But he has also shown an authoritarian streak. Two years ago, Bukele sent heavily armed soldiers to surround the congress building during a standoff over security funding, earning rebukes internationally.

“Although Bukele is a legiitmate, democratically president with solid majority backing, his authoritarian tendencies and weakening of any checks on his power is of great concern,” Shifter wrote. “The story is not unique to El Salvador — Democratic elections have yielded antidemocratic leaders and governments, of the right and the left elsewhere in Latin America. Experience tells us that such stories often have unhappy endings.”

About 51% of El Salvador’s 5.3 million registered voters turned out for Sunday’s election, will which also decide 262 municipal councils.

“This is what the people, the downtrodden, were waiting for,” said construction worker Salvador Torres. “We are tired of promises. They took all the money,” he said, referring to leaders of the two old-guard parties.

The leader of the Farabundo Marti Liberation Front, Oscar Ortiz, told journalists the party recognized the setback, which could reduce it to as few as eight seats in congress; the National Republican Alliance might win as few as a dozen.

Oscar Picardo, a researcher at the Francisco Gavidia University, said that Bukele’s party and its coalition ally might may have won enough seats for a two-thirds majority in congress, which would give the president even more power.

With that kind of majority, Bukele’s party would not only be able to advance the president’s agenda, but also name justices to the Supreme Court — another Bukele obstacle — as well as magistrates to the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, the attorney general, the prosecutor for the defense of human rights and others. Essentially his party could replace his loudest critics.

Eduardo Escobar, executive director of the nongovernmental organization Citizen Action, said that if New Ideas wins a congressional majority, El Salvador would lose “that brake on the exercise of power from the legislature when legality or constitutionality is exceeded, (and) that brakes any attempted abuse, any arbitrary act that the executive wants to commit.”

“It would deepen the authoritarianism of the government Bukele leads,” Escobar said, though he acknowledged that Bukele’s popularity remains at stratospheric levels and the rejection of the traditional parties is nearly as high.

New Ideas’ popularity is because “in the 30 years of government under these parties, the people have not seen improvements in their lives,” said Escobar.

In statements before polls closed, Bukele upped the stakes by calling on those who hadn’t voted yet to participate in “Operation Remate,” literally, “Operation finish them off.”

“Ï like to call it ”Operation Remate,” the country has decided to end the postwar era, but there is more to do,” Bukele said. “Let’s make this an overwhelming victory.”

Because campaigning is supposed to be suspended before and on election day, the country’s Supreme Electoral Tribunal said it would open an investigation into Bukele for making political statements on Sunday.

The tribunal noted that president is supposed to avoid using his office to influence election

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Colombia 1st in Americas With COVAX Supplied Vaccine

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Colombia on Monday became the first country in the Americas to receive a shipment of coronavirus vaccines from the United Nations-backed COVAX initiative, a program meant to ensure that the world’s most vulnerable people are inoculated but that has so far struggled to assist nations around the globe.

The arrival of 117,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine to the South American country’s capital, Bogota, came a few days after the anniversary of the first case of COVID-19 found in the region.

The Pan American Health Organization said it expects to increase vaccine access in the region through the COVAX effort each month, with plans to bring about 280 million vaccines to the Americas and the Caribbean by the end of the year.

But the initiative, formed to ensure fair access to vaccines by low- and middle-income countries, has been hampered by the severely limited global supply of doses and logistical problems. Although it aims to deliver 2 billion shots this year, it currently has legally binding agreements only for several hundred million shots.

The organization said in a news release Monday that 36 countries in the region will receive vaccines through the initiative. Of those, 26 will do so through their own funds while 10 will receive the vaccines for free.

“The arrival means that more health workers and high-risk populations can begin to be vaccinated,” World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement. “The COVID-19 pandemic can only end if vaccination occurs in an equitable way, and I am truly delighted to see vaccine doses in South America and other regions begin to be rolled out this week through COVAX.”

COVAX is only planning to provide enough vaccine for 20% to 30% of the people in poorer countries — a figure that will still leave those nations vulnerable to coronavirus outbreaks. Experts estimate that at least 70% of a population needs to be protected against COVID-19 to prevent future epidemics.

Colombia, the third largest country in Latin America by population, had already begun COVID-19 inoculations, receiving its first shipment of vaccines Feb. 15. The government has said it aims to vaccinate 35 million people this year, including hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan migrants and refugees who are currently living in the country.

The country of 50 million people has recorded more than 2.25 million cases and over 59,700 deaths of COVID-19. Its government expects to get 20 million doses of vaccines through the COVAX initiative this year.

“Today marks a very important milestone, today COVAX makes its first delivery in the Western Hemisphere, and the first country to receive it is Colombia,” President Iván Duque said during an event to announce the vaccine arrival. He added that the delivery makes clear “COVAX is active and works,” and called on “all of us to accelerate the distribution of vaccines through COVAX in the Americas.”

The Pan American Health Organization on Monday said all countries in the region are expected to receive initial doses of the AstraZeneca/Oxford vaccines starting this month if they meet all conditions. In addition, Peru, El Salvador and Bolivia will also receive Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines soon once administrative, legal and regulatory requirements are met.

Last week, Ghana was the first country in the world to receive vaccines through the COVAX initiative. The West African country received 600,000 doses of AstraZeneca vaccines

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BMW driver stung twice in 20 minutes for driving offences

A BMW driver in Canada has been fined by police twice in 20 minutes for two separate driving offences.

Highway officers from the Saskatoon Police Traffic Unit were out patrolling when they clocked the pricey car speeding at 108km/h in a 60km/h zone near Preston Avenue on Sunday.

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The driver was hit with a $788 (C$776) fine and sent on his way.

But no more than 20 minutes later, the same driver in the same BMW was pulled over on 25th Street East after being caught using his mobile phone while driving.

This time he was slugged with $591 (C$580).

Families of mining town fear exposure to deadly dust

"Itching for some fresh country air, looking for a place to stretch your legs, well then get yourself over to Tenterfield," the tourism ads say, showing lush green vegetation and a clear sky.

But for the residents of this town, the reality is the exact opposite.

Jessie and Ben Morrow have four children under seven but they won't let them play in the backyard.

Not because of nearby traffic or because they'd run off but because dust from a nearby quartz quarry is spewing out 97 per cent silica dust.

Exposure to silica can cause lung cancer and the Cancer Council says there's no evidence to support a safe level of silica dust exposure.

That terrifies the Morrows and all their neighbours in Tenterfield where Darryl McCarthy Constructions has submitted a DA to expand operations within Dowe's Quarry.

The company conservatively estimates that 4.8 million tonnes of quartzose rock – the most common source of crystalline silica – could be recovered from within the existing and expanded quarry.

Their Environmental Impact Statement also says they want crushing and screening on site using mobile processing equipment.

About 6.4 hectares of native vegetation will be removed and the extraction area will be increased by 4.4 hectares.

But Ms Morrow, a geologist, who along with other residents have commissioned their own air monitoring, says she fears for the town's health.

"I don't want my kids to be guinea pigs," she says.

As it is, they crush every day, a dust plume descending over the town.

The development application is currently before the Northern Regional Planning Panel.

A panel meeting in December heard from multiple residents all concerned about the proposal and the impact it would have on health and safety.

In a statement to 9News, Darryl McCarthy Constructions executive general manager operations Joel Barnes said: "The development application for the Dowe's Quarry is being carried out in accordance with relevant statutory processes that require consideration of community health and safety and consultation with the local community, the EPA, Council and Transport for NSW.

"The application will be determined by the Northern Regional Planning Panel (NRPP). The NRPP is an independent body that determines development matters of regional significance taking into account community submissions, agency advice and council recommendations."

Complicating matters, Tenterfield Shire Council mayor Peter Petty sits on the panel.

"Unfortunately, given that the application is currently under assessment by the Northern Joint Regional Planning Panel (sic) and I am a member of this panel, the panel's code of conduct prevents me from making statements about the process," he told 9News in a statement.

The panel has asked for an independent human health risk review. That review is being managed by Council.

DMC says it's committed to community safety and applies water and dust suppressant to haul roads, processing equipment and stockpiles, and doesn't blast in unfavourable conditions.

"We have committed to continuing this local business that provides employment and associated economic benefits. Our commitment to the community extends to health and safety," Mr Barnes said.

But Ms Morrow says the stress of the dust keeps her up at night.

"What damage is it doing?" she says.

"I stay awake at night wondering what damage has been done.

"Should we just leave?

"I don't want to say to one of my kids there's something wrong and you're not going to make 18 because we took a gamble on it being safe."

The Morrows' children are aged two, four, six and seven.

"It's a really big concern. Some people who live near the crusher can't drink their own tank water. They've had to screen off their verandahs," Ms Morrow says.

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There are around 30 properties within two kilometres of the quarry and the panel has received more than 100 submissions and signatories against the DA.

Another resident, Vince Sherry, says residents will be exposed to more noise and more dust but the impacts have been brushed aside to prioritise shareholder profits over residents.

The planning panel meets again later this month.

Backlash after Sydney fishermen catch 400kg shark

A group of Sydney fishermen have landed a 394.5-kilogram tiger shark during a competition, sparking a public backlash and earning the ire of environmentalists.

Critics pointed out the importance of sharks to marine ecosystems, with some calling for an outright ban on shark fishing tournaments.

READ MORE: Great white shark spotted hunting stingray

The Port Hacking Game Fishing Club has since pulled down its Facebook page, where pictures of the catch were first posted, after receiving what the head of Game Fishing New South Wales described as "threats and abusive messages".

One photo shows the crew of the Dark Horse dwarfed by the enormous shark, its head alone almost the size of the outboard motor as it hangs partially off the back of the boat.

Captain Paul Barning and his crew were among a number of Port Hacking Game Fishing Club members taking part in the state championships.

A second image shows another two giant sharks onboard another boat during the same competition.

"These guys go out and chase sharks in tournaments … most of the sharks get released — the odd one gets weighed in if it's a bit of a record," Scotty Lyons from Southern Sydney Fishing Tours said.

The tiger shark isn't a protected species in New South Wales but they are listed as "near threatened", meaning an angler can catch one per day under current fishing laws.

Environmental educator and WildAware founder Malin Frick said sharks were the most important apex predator in the ocean.

"They are the top predator so the killing of sharks will eventually make the ocean's ecosystem collapse," she said.

The enormous shark has since been given to scientists for research.

9News understands it was caught 16 nautical miles offshore in Port Hacking.

Tiger sharks typically grow between three to four metres in length and can weigh anywhere between 385 to 600 kilograms.