Exclusive: Inside the hunt for a vaccine
“If everything goes right, it will mean mass production of a Covid-19 vaccine will already be under way by the time the drug is approved for release.”
While one Queensland laboratory readies a Covid-19 vaccine for human trials, Howard-era public servant Jane Halton is co-ordinating the global response.
News
Covid-19: Next few days will decide outcome
“There’s no doubt that now I think it is a sort of now-or-never scenario. Those stories we are seeing from northern Italy and some parts of the United States are certainly that.”
As the government suspends parliament until August to deal with the outbreak, key advisers say the next week is critical in controlling the spread.
Australian airlines in turmoil
As the aviation industry faces financial ruin, Qantas boss Alan Joyce lashes out at a possible government bailout of Virgin Australia, a move that only accentuates the turbulence ahead.
Regional and rural doctors left behind in Covid-19 fight
With insufficient supplies of protective equipment and few ICU beds, doctors in regional New South Wales warn the Covid-19 pandemic will push the healthcare system to the brink.
As well as trying to contain the catastrophic outbreak of Covid-19, health authorities, governments and social media platforms must also try to combat the rampant spread of misinformation about the virus.
Christchurch killer pleads guilty in NZ
US and China fight over coronavirus. Guilty plea over Christchurch mosque killings. Detention and torture of Egyptian children exposed. Women at the forefront of Indian protests.
Opinion
Peter Doherty
The pandemic we had to have
“What is clearly different with this outbreak is that SARS-CoV-2 is completely new to us. Unlike with flu viruses, to which we all have some prior immunity, the world is experiencing a ‘virgin soil’ pandemic, where everyone is both susceptible and a potential transmitter. This doesn’t mean it’s unstoppable, though.”
Paul Bongiorno
Government’s crashing failure in face of crisis
“If anything crystallises the brutal impact of the coronavirus crisis in Australia, it is the thousands queued outside Centrelink offices around the country this week. The lines began forming the day after the prime minister announced that vast sectors of the economy were to be shut down, with income support for those affected. Here was the intersection of life or death measures, crashing the livelihoods of millions and again exposing a government response that was poorly thought through and executed.”
Gadfly
Trump’s life or debt decision
One savvy business sage who this week was in Gadfly’s ear thinks the fast-failing enterprises in the United States might see Bone Spurs Trump become the first president in office to go bankrupt. The value of his gilded city towers and hotels is crashing with each passing moment and given they are leveraged to buggery with either Deutsche Bank or the Russian mafia, the whole rickety edifice will soon be underwater.
Letters, Cartoon & Editorial
Editorial
The sheer scale of it
Perhaps the government simply cannot visualise it. It is possible they are unable to fathom what is happening, to appreciate its size. Morrison’s response to this crisis is piecemeal and shambolic. His press conference on Tuesday night was the sort of policy improvisation that could have started with the words “Yes, and…” The prime minister is balancing the health of the public against the health of the economy, and doing neither very well.
Culture
MICF director Susan Provan on shutting down the show
Susan Provan has been director of the Melbourne International Comedy Festival for 27 years, taking it from strength to strength. So, the decision to cancel this year’s event – for the first time in its history – was no laughing matter. “We were in a position where we had to move quickly. We were literally building venues. We needed to minimise the fallout.”
HBO’s The Plot Against America, based on the Philip Roth novel, brings together Winona Ryder and John Turturro in a reimagining of America’s World War II history. Now the slickly produced series is more pertinent to current times than the creators could ever have imagined.
Maxine Beneba Clarke
generation zoom
in the third week of the pandemic
schools started closing
workers were sent home
and they started to call the youngsters:
generation zoom
named, of course, for that chat-app
all of them seemed to use
logging in for facetime
completing maths lessons online, dancing
tiktok feeds on loop, clicking in
to instanews, and everyone was asking:
what on earth will become
of whatsapp’s children?
Life
In a season of drastic upheaval, the author reflects on the connections and comfort of her garden and looks towards the coming spring.
Lisa De Vanna tackles soccer lockdown
For star Matildas veteran Lisa De Vanna and other Australian players, the worldwide shutdown of soccer is having devastating consequences – both financially and psychologically.
Books
Puzzles
Quotes
HUMILITY
“We are much better prepared than we would have been because of the work I did back then in my day as Health minister.”
The former prime minister takes credit for Australia’s Covid-19 preparedness. Experts predict the country will run out of ICU beds within the fortnight.
TECHNOLOGY
“MyGov has not been offline, it’s simply suffered from a distributed denial of service attack this morning.”
The Government Services minister suggests hackers crashed the Centrelink website. It was actually just hundreds of thousands of baristas, pilots, retail workers, chefs and travel agents who lost their livelihoods overnight.
HINDSIGHT
“I’d have said, ‘Yeah, maybe we should hold them on the ship.’ ”
The New South Wales Health minister expresses regret that cruise ship passengers were allowed to disembark in Sydney without being tested for Covid-19. But who could have imagined 2700 people crammed into a boat would be at risk of spreading a highly infectious virus?
REVOLUTION
“We will learn to kiss and hold each other through the waves of the web. We will feed each other, redistribute wealth, strike. We will understand our own importance from the places we must stay.”
The pop star, who once implored her fans to “Work Bitch”, appears to call for the end of capitalism on her Instagram. Seize the means of production, comrade.
OPTIMISM
“You know, this is an opportunity.”
The billionaire furniture salesman finds a silver lining in the coronavirus pandemic. He was later mortified the public now sees him as “a heartless, greedy old bastard”, which apparently wasn’t the point of the interview.
HEAVY-HANDEDNESS
“Coronavirus will continue to be one of the biggest challenges facing balustrade related industries (ABA) in modern times.”
The peak body says it will be profoundly impacted by Covid-19. If no other plea for social distancing has moved you, please think of them.