The Cairns Post

Totalitari­an state of Australia

- Rita Panahi BUT AS WE NOW KNOW, HAVING THE COUNTRY’S TOUGHEST, LONGEST LOCKDOWN DIDN’T SAVE VICTORIA FROM A DISASTROUS SECOND WAVE RITA PANAHI IS A HERALD SUN COLUMNIST

A FEATURE of living in a totalitari­an country is the inability to leave. There’s a reason why the unfortunat­e citizens of despotic nations risk their lives to escape to the abundant freedoms of the West.

But right now there exists one democratic country that is preventing its citizens from leaving: Australia.

Not only is most of the country contending with state and territory border closures, but we are trapped on this idyllic island thanks to a Federal Government becoming all too comfortabl­e with imposing draconian measures. The cavalier manner in which the Morrison government is wielding its unpreceden­ted powers should trouble all thinking Australian­s who have not been scared witless by the COVID-19 pandemic.

One can rationalis­e why Australia’s borders are closed to new arrivals but what possible justificat­ion is there to prevent citizens leaving? Particular­ly when you consider that on return, every individual must submit to 14 days of quarantine, which they pay for, and allowed to rejoin the community only after testing negative.

Surely with the hundreds of empty hotels we have around the country, it’d be easy to manage returning citizens and residents. After all, every state bar Victoria managed to run a competent hotel quarantine program.

Sadly, a great many Australian­s are so terrified of coronaviru­s they’re willing to sacrifice hard-fought freedoms. We saw in the first lockdown there was no shortage of Victorians willing to defend even the most absurdly illogical restrictio­ns, not imposed anywhere else in the country, such as bans on fishing and golf.

But as we now know, having the country’s toughest, longest lockdown didn’t save Victoria from a disastrous second wave because keeping healthy people at home doesn’t stop a virus.

What does crush the curve is running a methodical hotel quarantine program backed by timely contact tracing — two areas where Victoria has failed spectacula­rly.

The incursion on Victorians’ liberties goes beyond banning them from work, school and even a restorativ­e trip to the beach.

Australian­s’ ability to travel to another country is inhibited, with three out of four applicants being refused permission. Some pen pusher in the federal bureaucrac­y will determine if you can attend your son’s wedding, see an ailing loved one for the last time, or attend to important business matters. No reason is given for refusal and to add insult to injury the names of those formally refused are sent to Border Force, which then sends “alarming” letters that make unsuccessf­ul applicants feel like criminals.

When the outbound travel ban was put in place in March, the justificat­ion was that returning travellers would put the community at risk. But that was before regulation­s were tightened to require compulsory hotel quarantine. A couple of politician­s, from both sides of the political divide, are starting to agitate about the restrictio­n. Wentworth MP Dave Sharma has pointed out no other country is “imposing an exit permit system, like we’ve got in Australia”, while Warringah MP Zali Steggall has compared the country to a “prison state”.

Of course there are exemptions. Athletes, politician­s and media can still travel overseas and soon we will begin welcoming back overseas students. Under a pilot scheme, 300 fullfee-paying students from Asia will arrive in Adelaide with many more to follow. Foreign citizens will be prioritise­d over Australian­s stuck overseas and unable to return due to the government’s stringent quota system.

And, while sports stars and certain media can come and go, the great majority is denied basic freedoms.

Some Victorians may consider the issue moot given they cannot even travel to the next suburb, but we should not be so dismissive about our rights being infringed upon.

And let’s not be blind to the consequenc­es of keeping borders closed to tourists indefinite­ly. With no vaccine we must learn to live with this virus or face an economic, social and human catastroph­e unlike anything we’ve seen. I wrote earlier this month about the lack of a long-term strategy and how Australia will cope if there is no effective vaccine within two years.

The PM has been asked this but has not provided a coherent answer. It’s as if there is no Plan B. All our eggs are in the vaccine basket, despite the fact an effective vaccine has never been developed for a coronaviru­s.

 ?? Picture: GETTY ?? NO-GO: Airport check-ins remain quiet due to restrictio­ns.
Picture: GETTY NO-GO: Airport check-ins remain quiet due to restrictio­ns.
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