General
Lockdown of Victoria’s public housing towers during COVID crisis breached human rights, ombudsman finds

The Victorian Government did not properly consider the human rights of the residents in nine public housing towers in Melbourne before imposing an immediate lockdown to prevent a coronavirus outbreak with “explosive potential” from taking hold, a report by the Victorian Ombudsman says.
Key points:
- The report found public health officials thought the towers would be locked down the following day, not immediately
- Deborah Glass said the decision breached the human rights of residents and they were entitled to an apology
- She said the decision was made at a Crisis Council of Cabinet meeting earlier that day
An investigation the states’s ombudsman, Deborah Glass, said health officials had agreed to the need for a lockdown on July 4, and they…
Continue Reading
-
General17 hours ago
Four charged over alleged six-hour gang rape of girl in south-west Sydney
-
Noosa News19 hours ago
Logan City Council to pull out of federal government Climate Active program due to financial pressure, transparency concerns
-
General16 hours ago
Carrie Bickmore pays tribute to Isaac Smith and Scott Selwood after gruelling marathon
-
Noosa News16 hours ago
Suspicious fire, Glenview – Sunshine Coast