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'It's heartbreaking still': Bushfire survivors reflect one year on

It was January 4 last year when the Black Summer bushfires reached the doorstep of Ella Bandur childhood home in Batemans Bay.

When she looks outside a year later, the blackened earth is covered in a layer of green following months of rain.

READ MORE: Before and after: One year since horrific Black Summer bushfires

But while the fire is long gone, the impacts are still very much being felt and after an unprecedented year of disaster, the community is struggling to get back on its feet.

The Currowan fire had been threatening Batemans Bay since November 2019 but on New Year's Eve, conditions took a turn for the worst.

Multiple fire fronts began closing in, turning the sky red and forcing thousands to flee their homes.

Ella Bandur's mum, Marianne Bandur, works as a nurse at the local hospital and while the town evacuated, she spent the day moving patients to safety.

READ MORE: Australian bushfires one year on: How Black Summer of death and destruction erupted

"It was a quite a traumatic day, we were evacuating patients from end of the hospital to another just so we had them all in one area in case the fire brigade had to defend the hospital," Ms Bandur told nine.com.au.

"Meanwhile I was getting texts from neighbours saying our house was gone, so it was a very emotional day."

Unable to return home, Ms Bandur spent a sleepless night staying with family.

"The whole summer I had been prepared to lose our home because so many others had and we live in the bush so that made me think we would and I thought I'd come to terms with that but it wasn't until it was actually happening when I fell to pieces a little bit," she said.

When she arrived back at her property the next day, she found her home still standing – something she still regards as a miracle.

Due to a change in the wind and efforts from fire crews, the Bandur family were able to return to home, but the threat remained.

"Even after those few really horrific days, the threat was still there so people were still really on edge … a few days later there was a fire in a vacant block at the end of our road and a few days after that a fire reached our neighbour's back yard," Ella Bandur said.

"Everyone was trying to recover but we kept having blackouts so our freezer would defrost, so Mum would have to go back out and buy everything again."

The Currowan Fire burnt for 74 days across 499,621 hectares and destroyed 312 homes.

Less than two months later, a second disaster hit – the COVID-19 pandemic – forcing a community barely standing into lockdown.

"A lot of the businesses were really affected. We really rely on summer to get us through those winter months," Ella Bandur said.

"During summer our population triples and everyone complains about it but we really need it because then on those winter days and you've got no one the summer money gets everyone through but we didn't have that at all this year."

But just as the regrowth is a sign of new beginnings, it serves as a reminder of how far there is to go before life returns to normal.

"It's felt like a really long year. It's been a total rollercoaster of emotions," Ms Bandur said.

"It's lovely seeing the rain and seeing the green but even still, you drive through areas that were really badly affected and I get really sad seeing that because there's so much bush that hasn't regenerated and it wont happen in one year, it'll happen in 20 or 30 and that's devastating."

"As someone who's lived here and knows what it was before, you couldn't see people's homes and now you can see through their front door because all the bush has been burnt to smithereens.

"It's still heartbreaking."

The remains of a car yard in the industrial estate at Batemans Bay.The fire in Currowan, north of Batemans Bay.

And the bush isn't the only thing trying to recover – many in in community are still struggling after having their homes and livelihoods burnt to the ground only to be hit with a once-in-a-century pandemic.

"I know there are still a lot of traumatised people here. With COVID happening, they missed out on people helping them to recover," Ms Bandur said.

"I feel for those people who really needed the support from friends and family and weren't able to get it in a time you need it most.

"It's been very difficult."

But not all the memories are bad ones, with some even sparking new traditions and helping the community heal its wounds.

This year, the Bandur family spent the anniversary of the Black Summer bushfires paying tribute to the firefighters who helped save their home.

"I remember I had this whole army of firies in our yard and I wanted to make tea but we didn't have electricity but we had gas so my neighbour brought over some water and we actually boiled it on the stove," Ms Bandur said.

"I was rummaging around in the cupboard thinking it would be nice to have a biscuit or something to offer them but we didn't have any food.

"But then I found a panettone left over from Christmas. It was all we had left.

"Everyone loved it, it lasted about five seconds.

"It just one of those funny memories I had so we decided to relive that this year and I think we'll do it in years to come."

Second Australian Open charter flight records positive COVID-19 case

A second overseas charter flight of players and participants arriving in Melbourne for the Australian Open has recorded a positive COVID-19 case.

A passenger on-board a charter flight that arrived in Melbourne at 8.20am on January 15 from Abu Dhabi has tested positive.

The passenger is not a player and has been transferred to a health hotel to undertake a 14-day quarantine period. The passenger tested negative to their pre-departure test.

READ MORE: Two positive cases on Australian Open flight from the US

It's the third positive case found across two charter flights of participants and players arriving in Australia for the Australian Open.

While there had been rumours online of a positive coronavirus test from a passenger on an Australian Open charter flight into Adelaide, authorities clarified in a statement late into the night that this wasn't the case.

"SA Health has confirmed that there is no one who has an active COVID-19 infection in the entire tennis cohort based in Adelaide," the Australian Open said on Twitter. "Testing will continue on a daily basis."

In its second statement for the night, Australian Open organisers confirmed that 23 of the passengers on-board the second affected flight were players.

It means a total of 47 players are now unable to train ahead of the tournament as the strict quarantine measures are enforced.

Tennis players and their support teams are seen disembarking Flight EY460 carrying tennis players and their support teams participating at the Australian Open at Melbourne Jet Base adjoining the Melbourne International airport on January 14, 2021 in Melbourne, Australiahttps://twitter.com/AustralianOpen/status/1350422089778360321?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Earlier in the day a flight from the US with 24 players on-board had two people test positive to COVID-19 after arrival into Melbourne. Neither were players and both had tested negative in their pre-departure tests.

A spokesperson for COVID-19 Quarantine Victoria said all remaining 63 passengers on the flight from Abu Dhabi must also undertake two weeks in quarantine and will be unable to train.

"All remaining 63 passengers on the flight have been designated close contacts. Players and support people will be unable to access training and must undertake a standard 14-day quarantine period.

"Players are being supported to access equipment for their hotel rooms to help them maintain their fitness during this time.

READ MORE: Victoria accused of 'double standards' over Australian Open

https://twitter.com/AustralianOpen/status/1350372902378487812

"There are no other known positive tests from this flight, but routine testing will continue for passengers.

"Before any person can exit quarantine after 14 days, they must be first medically cleared by public health experts."

All of the passengers are already in quarantine hotels and the positive case is in a specially-designed "health hotel" for positive cases.

In an email to players, which has since been shared online, health authorities assured players that they are doing everything they can to "mitigate the impact" of being forced to spend 14 days in a hotel room prior to a tournament.

"We are aware of the major impact this has on your preparation for the Australian summer," the email reads.

"And are going to do everything we can to mitigate this impact. Our entire team is mobilised and here to support you.

"We will do everything that we can to get you through this."

You can get up-to-date information from the Federal Government's Coronavirus Australia app, available on the App Store, Google Play and the Government's WhatsApp channel.

Beyond Blue's Coronavirus Mental Wellbeing Support Service is a 24/7 service free of charge to all Australians. Visit the site here or call 1800512348

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Angela Merkel's party chooses new leader

Chancellor Angela Merkel's centre-right party on Saturday chose Armin Laschet, the pragmatic governor of Germany's most populous state, as its new leader — sending a signal of continuity months before an election in which voters will decide who becomes the new chancellor.

Laschet defeated Friedrich Merz, a conservative and one-time Merkel rival, at an online convention of the Christian Democratic Union. Laschet won 521 votes to Merz's 466. A third candidate, prominent lawmaker Norbert Roettgen, was eliminated in a first round of voting.

Saturday's vote isn't the final word on who will run as the centre-right candidate for chancellor in Germany's September 26 election, but Laschet will either run for chancellor or will have a big say in who does.

The new elected Christian Democratic Union, CDU, party chairman Armin Laschet stands on the podium after the voting at a digital party convention in Berlin, Germany, Saturday, Jan. 16, 2021

Merkel, who has been chancellor since 2005, announced in late 2018 that she wouldn't seek a fifth term. She also stepped down from the CDU leadership.

The decision ends an 11-month leadership limbo in Germany's strongest party after outgoing leader Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, who had failed to impose her authority on the party, announced her resignation. A vote on her successor was delayed twice because of the coronavirus pandemic.

There had been no clear favourite going into Saturday's convention, but the election of Merz would have marked at least a symbolic break with the Merkel era. Laschet will now have to work to secure party unity.

Laschet, 59, was elected in 2017 as governor of North Rhine-Westphalia state, a traditional centre-left stronghold. He governs the region in a coalition with the pro-business Free Democrats, the CDU's traditional ally on the right, but would likely be able to work fairly smoothly with a more liberal partner. Current polls point to the environmentalist Greens as a possible key to power in the election.

Governor of North Rhine-Westphalia and candidate for the party chairmanship, Armin Laschet, speaks at the CDU's digital national party conference

Laschet pointed Saturday to the value of continuity and moderation, and cited the storming of the US Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump as an example of where deliberate polarisation can lead.

"Trust is what keeps us going and what has been broken in America," he told delegates before the vote. "By polarising, sowing discord and distrust, and systematically lying, a president has destroyed stability and trust."

"We must speak clearly but not polarise," Laschet said. "We must be able to integrate, hold society together."

He said that the party needs "the continuity of success" and "we will only win if we remain strong in the middle of society."

Laschet said that "there are many people who, above all, find Angela Merkel good and only after that the CDU." He added that "we need this trust now as a party" and that "we must work for this trust."

Saturday's result will now be officially endorsed in a postal ballot — which is expected to be a formality but is required by German law.

The CDU is part of the Union bloc along with the Bavaria-only Christian Social Union, and the two parties will decide together on the centre-right candidate for chancellor. The Union currently has a healthy poll lead, helped by positive reviews of Merkel's handling of the pandemic.

CSU leader Markus Soeder, the governor of Bavaria, is widely considered a potential candidate after gaining in political stature during the pandemic. Some also consider Health Minister Jens Spahn, who supported Laschet and was elected as one of his deputies, a possible contender.

Polls have shown Soeder's ratings outstripping those of Saturday's CDU candidates. Laschet has garnered mixed reviews in the pandemic, particularly as a vocal advocate of loosening restrictions after last year's first phase.

He shouldn't expect much of a honeymoon as CDU leader. This year also features six state elections, the first two in mid-March.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks to the media following a video call she had with other leaders and heads of states of the European Union at the Chancellery on March 17.

Merkel, now 66, has steered Germany, and Europe, through a series of crises since she took office. She has also broken repeatedly with conservative orthodoxy, for example by accelerating Germany's exit from nuclear energy and ending military conscription.

Her 2015 decision to allow in large numbers of migrants led to divisions on the center-right and strengthened the far-right Alternative for Germany party, which entered Germany's parliament two years later.

Alternative for Germany co-leader Joerg Meuthen said Laschet's election means the CDU "will carry on Merkeling" and asserted that his party "remains the only conservative party in Germany."