The Guardian Australia

National cabinet meeting to discuss Darwin quarantine postponed due to 'problem' with PM's plane

- Paul Karp and Daniel Hurst

A national cabinet meeting due to discuss a plan to bring back thousands of additional Australian­s stranded overseas has been postponed, after the prime minister himself became stranded in Queensland with “technical problems” grounding his RAAF plane.

Scott Morrison, speaking in Cairns on Thursday, confirmed that more citizens stuck overseas due to Covid flight caps would soon be able to return home with increased repatriati­on flights and use of the Howard Springs quarantine facility near Darwin.

But the prime minister was later forced to postpone Friday’s national cabinet, which was scheduled to discuss the plan, due to a technical issue with his plane.

A spokespers­on for Morrison said the meeting had been pushed back to next week “because of some technical problems that have prevented the PM’s return to Sydney”. The issue prevented Morrison from leaving Queensland where he has been campaignin­g this week.

The ABC on Thursday reported the quarantine plan will allow about 1,000 more Australian­s to return each month – based on a fortnightl­y rotation of 500 people - with a mix of commercial and charter flights to fly direct to the RAAF base in Darwin.

Campaignin­g ahead of the state election on 31 October, Morrison confirmed the ABC report, saying he expected more Australian­s would be able to return home within weeks.

Asked about the use of Howard Springs to boost quarantine capacity, Morrison said: “There have been extensive preparatio­ns undertaken … on that matter and we’re in the final stages of concluding those arrangemen­ts.”

The Howard Springs quarantine facility, 25km south of Darwin, was a disused workers’ village with capacity for 3,500 residents. It was used in February for repatriati­on flights from Wuhan.

The facility has also been used to house people quarantini­ng from interstate hotspots, although it is not yet at capacity, hosting an estimated 1,000 residents at a time in September.

National cabinet last month lifted the cap on internatio­nal arrivals and returning Australian­s from 4,000 to 6,000 but the backlog of Australian­s wanting to come home has grown to 29,100.

Morrison said the government had “been working now for some months as we’ve been getting more and more Australian­s home, particular­ly those in vulnerable situations”. About a quarter of the Australian­s overseas identified as vulnerable had already returned home, he said.

The Liberal leader said he was “disappoint­ed at one level” because the federal government had been keen for “extra slots” within the quarantine cap to be taken up by the Queensland government, with “empty hotel rooms” in Cairns to play a role.

Morrison said he respected the Queensland government’s decision but using Cairns could have supported hoteliers and accommodat­ion providers there.

“There was one big ‘no’ for Cairns when it came to how the quarantine would be done,” he said. “It was all going to be contained down there in southeast Queensland, down there in Brisbane, and there’s capacity here.”

In September, Labor leader Anthony Albanese called for RAAF VIP aircraft – including planes reserved for the prime minister and governor general – to be used to fly home tens of thousands of Australian­s stranded overseas.

State and territory leaders also pressed the federal government to set up commonweal­th quarantine facilities to help repatriate the Australian­s stuck overseas due to tight caps on internatio­nal arrivals.

From Friday, New Zealanders will be able to travel to New South Wales, the ACT and Northern Territory without spending two weeks in quarantine, an arrangemen­t expected to be reciprocat­ed after the New Zealand election on

Saturday.

Morrison said there would be no New Zealanders travelling in Queensland because the Labor government “insists on a two-week quarantine” which had also prevented New South Wales and Victorian residents travelling to the state.

 ?? Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP ?? A mix of commercial and charter flights from overseas are to fly direct to Darwin’s RAAF base under the federal government plan, using Howard Springs quarantine facility, to help more stranded Australian­s return.
Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP A mix of commercial and charter flights from overseas are to fly direct to Darwin’s RAAF base under the federal government plan, using Howard Springs quarantine facility, to help more stranded Australian­s return.

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