Tag Archives: oceania

Victoria accused of 'double standards' over Australian Open

The Victorian government is being accused of double standards as it welcomes over 1000 tennis players and officials ahead of the Australian Open, despite its own residents overseas and interstate unable to get home.

Around 1200 elite international players and their support staff are set to arrive in Melbourne to begin their 14-day coronavirus quarantines ahead of the tournament on February 8.

Hundreds have already arrived since Thursday, flying in on chartered flights organised by the Australian Open.

It comes a week after the federal government slashed the number of returned travellers allowed into Australia's hotel quarantines in half, citing concerns around more infectious new COVID-19 variants.

There are still more than 37,000 Australians stranded overseas and unable to get home, with 4800 of those classed as "vulnerable".

Overnight, Emirates announced it would suspend all its flights to Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne until further notice, adding further hurdles for those seeking to return from Europe and the Middle East.

All Australian Open players and officials must return a negative COVID-19 test before boarding a flight to Australia.

Two players, former world number one Andy Murray, and Grand Slam finalist Madison Keys have already had to cancel their travel plans after returning positive tests.

The players will spend 14 days in three quarantine hotels in Melbourne, but will be allowed out for five hours each day to train.

Despite the strict measures, the move has attracted criticism from stranded Australians as well as politicians interstate and airline bosses.

Sydney and Brisbane remain designated "red zones" according to the Victorian government's "traffic zone" system for identifying hot spots, despite both cities reporting a number of days without locally acquired cases.

This means all residents from those regions are barred entry, unless granted a special exemption, leaving hundreds of Victorians unable to return home.

Qantas CEO Alan Joyce described the decision as "devastating", saying it was bizarre to let tennis players in from countries where COVID-19 ran rampant, while Victorians interstate were left stranded.

"Victoria's approach to Sydney seems to be out of proportion with the actual risk," Mr Joyce said on Friday.

He said Qantas and its budget arm Jetstar had cancelled almost 3000 flights between Melbourne and Sydney since the northern beaches outbreak saw borders slam close before Christmas.

"Behind each of those cancelled flights are a lot of people whose plans have been thrown up in the air," Mr Joyce said.

NSW Transport Minister Andrew Constance yesterday accused the Victorian government of inconsistency in its border restrictions.

"Against the backdrop of having an international event and trying to maintain normalcy: fine," Mr Constance said.

"But I think where this falls short is the inconsistency in their decision making.

"Throughout 2021, we need consistency around the trigger points that these state restrictions are going to have or else it will just trash jobs."

Victoria recorded its tenth consecutive day with no new locally acquired coronavirus cases today, with three detected in hotel quarantine.

Chaos, confusion and Trump: My year of reporting from the US

Less than ten days ago I was standing at the doors on the west side of the US Capitol building as Trump supporters smashed their way into the hallways of power.

I watched people dressed in strange costumes charge up the stairs, clamber over walls and up scaffolding at the West Front, where Joe Biden will be inaugurated as president next week.

They were chanting "stop the steal", "our house" and "fake news", some were threatening to kill the Vice President, lawmakers and the media. It was shocking, at times terrifying, and completely surreal from start to finish.

From Brexit chaos to coronavirus

It is almost exactly one year since I touched down in Los Angeles to begin a posting in Nine's US bureau, and a new adventure for my family.

Flying across the Atlantic from London after a busy stint in our Europe bureau, I felt certain life in America would be calmer. The weather would be nicer, the time zone more manageable, and I was leaving the endless chaos and upheaval of Brexit behind me.

We had a two-month honeymoon period reintroducing our children – then aged three and five – to sunshine and settling them into school and preschool, as I started an exciting new job.

https://twitter.com/AmeliaAdams9/status/1239670965807673344

In early March coronavirus hit hard, and California enacted some of the strictest lockdown measures in the country.

Our son had just started at a fantastic elementary school and made some new buddies when school campuses closed "temporarily".

More than ten months on, they're still closed and we have no indication of when in person learning will resume.

Somehow, he has learned to read and write via Zoom classroom and his father's diligent supervision and efforts.

If you think work Zoom meetings are a slog, imagine 25 six-year-olds on the same screen yelling at each other, the teacher, and their supervising parent.

Here's an example: "MOM I can't find the right maths book!" yells Lyle, while another kid still in his PJs helps himself to a sandwich, and another wanders offscreen yelling "I'm going to the bathroom!" Lyle's mum runs through the background half-dressed waving the maths book.

It's mayhem, but everyone is doing their best. There are technical meltdowns, and of course a complete lack of real social interaction, not to mention sport or physical education.

I see my friends' Facebook posts from Australia about their children's kindergarten graduation, soccer matches and sleepovers and am filled with guilt about what our boy is missing.

Adams, wearing a mask, waits for her cue in New York City.

Our three-year old daughter was begrudgingly attending preschool a couple of days a week when COVID-19 hit, and lockdown suited her perfectly.

We set up a tent in the living room. We ordered board games online, drew pictures for the grandparents back home, baked cookies and watched every Home Alone movie on repeat.

Even in a global pandemic, Home Alone 4 was a low point.

Preschool has closed several times since for COVID outbreaks (they only close the classroom with a positive case, the rest of the school remains open).

Our daughter wears a tiny unicorn face mask, but it's not an age group renowned for hygiene or social distancing.

It baffles me that preschools remain open – to be clear we support this, it has been our saving grace through ten months of homeschooling – while our son has to sit at home in front of a screen.

'I had to keep reminding myself I was not on a film set'

The inconsistencies in the coronavirus response on a national and state level have been confusing and at times infuriating.

While shooting in Kansas, locals and business owners constantly asked me and my crew to remove our face masks.

In Florida while waiting for a scrubbed NASA rocket launch, I visited a nail salon for the first time all year, baffled, but delighted, how it was deemed safe to get a pedicure on one side of the country but not the other.

Covering the Capitol protests in Washington.

Days later I found myself in the middle of thousands of BLM protesters opposite the White House, as they demanded government action and commitment to end years of systemic racism across America, and answers for the deaths of Black people at the hands of White law enforcement.

Standing in front of a giant bonfire on the street while rioters burned American flags and attempted unsuccessfully to breach the heavy police line holding them back from Donald Trump's doorstep, I was certain I would never see a scene like it again in US history. Last week I was proved wrong.

As we stood in a huge crowd at the Washington Monument, my cameraman and I listened to Donald Trump urging his supporters to "walk down to the Capitol","show strength" and "stop the steal".

The scene outside the Capitol building as pro_Trump supporters gathered. Picture: Amelia Adams

We quickly got moving. Walking up the National Mall, Trump supporters harassed us, at times trying to smash the camera, or trip us, generally intimidating and threatening us.

Face masks were few and far between, and as the violence escalated, the threat of COVID was the last thing on our minds.

It was my impression that the majority of supporters who stormed the Capitol that day were surprised by how far they made it, and how much damage they did.

https://twitter.com/AmeliaAdams9/status/1346934624031657986

With my cameraman and security guard, I stood at a doorway while protesters smashed their way in with crowbars, metal poles, and their bare hands.

On the other side, armed guards tried to hold them off but eventually relented as the crush and power of the crowd overwhelmed them.

We didn't cross the threshold, as by then we knew one Trump supporter had been shot dead, and with intermittent phone signal, it was impossible to gauge how dangerous the situation was inside.

Amelia masked up outside a Trump rally.

Some people came out declaring victory; bloodied, shirtless, red-eyed from tear gas, clutching documents and souvenirs from the Senate and House chambers.

Among them were conspiracy theorists and civil war enthusiasts.

Others were average Americans who emerged from Congress chanting, singing, even laughing; mum and dad Republican voters with a tale to tell the grandkids: "The day we stormed the Capitol and showed that Mike Pence who this country belongs to."

'It's on': Nine US Correspondent Adams checks her notes as she prepares for the camera to roll.

I suspect most of the latter group had no idea that a Capitol police officer had been bashed to death and Senators were cowered under chairs texting their families to say goodbye.

I had to keep reminding myself I was not on a film set.

The words that have stuck with me

In the days leading up to our move to America I was in Iraq, covering the fall out from Donald Trump's decision to have Iranian general Qasem Soleimani assassinated.

Four months before that I was up on the Iraqi-Syrian border covering the Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria, sparked by the Trump Administration ordering US troops to withdraw from the region.

I'd seen first-hand the consequences of some of President Trump's "America First" policy decisions.

I also covered several global summits and state visits during which the US president regularly put world leaders offside, broke Royal protocol, and dropped loaded tweets from Air Force One which always left a diplomatic firestorm in his wake.

US Bureau Cameraman Nick Richardson was tear gassed in the Capitol attack

I expected the 2020 US Election campaign to be exciting, unpredictable, perhaps even brutal.

I did not expect it to culminate in thousands of Trump supporters turning on law enforcement and mounting a deadly insurrection.

Four years ago this week Donald Trump stood on a stage where his followers would stage their attempt to subvert democracy.

He spoke of the "orderly and peaceful transfer of power," thanking the Obamas for their "gracious aid" throughout the transition.

And he acknowledged the tens of millions who voted for him "to become part of a historic movement the likes of which the world has never seen before".

He sure was right about that.

Of all the Trump supporters I met and interviewed at the Capitol that day, the words of one man in particular have stuck with me.

He insisted that the so-called "revolution" was no longer about Donald Trump.

"This is for my teenage daughters, so that they can speak freely and think freely," he told me.

"We would rather die free than live under tyranny."

Millions of Americans agree with him.

I wonder how those convictions will manifest in the weeks and months ahead, as the phenomenal movement that is Trumpism enters the post-Trump era.

Capitol mob aimed to 'assassinate' elected officials

The pro-Trump mob that stormed the US Capitol last week aimed to "capture and assassinate elected officials," federal prosecutors said in court documents.

The remarks came in a motion prosecutors filed late Thursday in the case against Jacob Chansley, the Arizona man who took part in the insurrection while sporting face paint, no shirt and a furry hat with horns.

Prosecutors say that after Chansley climbed up to the dais where Vice President Mike Pence had been presiding moments earlier, Chansley wrote a threatening note to Pence that said: "It's only a matter of time, justice is coming."

Pence and other congressional leaders had been ushered out of the chamber by the Secret Service and US Capitol Police before the rioters stormed into the room.

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"Strong evidence, including Chansley's own words and actions at the Capitol, supports that the intent of the Capitol rioters was to capture and assassinate elected officials in the United States Government," prosecutors wrote in their memo urging the judge to keep Chansley behind bars.

Gerald Williams, Chansley's attorney, didn't return a phone call and email Friday morning seeking comment. A detention hearing is scheduled in his case for later Friday.

The FBI has been investigating whether any of the rioters had plots to kidnap members of Congress and hold them hostage, focusing particularly on the men seen carrying plastic zip tie handcuffs and pepper spray. Prosecutors raised a similar prospect on Friday in the case of a former Air Force officer who they alleged carried plastic zip-tie handcuffs because he intended "to take hostages." But so far, the Justice Department has not publicly released any specific evidence on the plots or explained how the rioters planned to carry them out.

Chansley, who calls himself the "QAnon Shaman" and has long been a fixture at Trump rallies, surrendered to the FBI field office in Phoenix on Saturday. News photos show him at the riot shirtless, with his face painted and wearing a fur hat with horns, carrying a U.S. flag attached to a wooden pole topped with a spear.

QAnon is an apocalyptic and convoluted conspiracy theory spread largely through the internet and promoted by some right-wing extremists.

Chansley told investigators he came to the Capitol "at the request of the president that all 'patriots' come to DC on January 6, 2021."

An indictment unsealed Tuesday in Washington him with civil disorder, obstruction of an official proceeding, disorderly conduct in a restricted building, and demonstrating in a Capitol building.

Supporters of President Donald Trump climb the West wall of the the US Capitol.