Australians will be free to go to outdoor events with up to 10,000 spectators next month in a big step to remove pandemic restrictions, as federal and state leaders warn against holding major protests planned for this weekend.
In a significant relief for restaurants and other venues, the 100 person cap will be removed on indoor gatherings under the national cabinet's stage three restrictions, but venues will have to enforce rules to allow only one person for every four square metres, limiting numbers according to the size of the space.
Speaking after national cabinet met on Friday morning, Prime Minister Scott Morrison also aired plans for a pilot scheme to allow overseas students to come to Australia on flights arranged with universities and governments, but he said this would only happen in states with open domestic borders.
"I made clear to the states and territories today, if someone can't come to your state from Sydney, then someone can't come to your state from Singapore," he said.
"If you want to open up borders for international students, then you have to open up borders for Australians."
Mr Morrison praised the Queensland government, which said it would open its state border next month.
"I welcome that opening of the borders next month," Mr Morrison told Parliament. However, he suggested Western Australia might keep its border closed for longer.
Mr Morrison made it clear the changes were intended to take place through July rather than on July 1, with each state and territory to decide when to move to the final stage of eased restrictions under the national cabinet's roadmap. He also ruled out nightclubs re-opening, something slated for stage three, noting they are "one of the areas of failure" overseas.
Up to 10,000 people will be able to go to the football and other outdoor stadium events under the new plan but organisers will only be able to fill 25 per cent of the capacity of their venues.
Venues that can take more than 40,000 people will be treated differently in decisions yet to come, but Mr Morrison suggested larger stadiums like the MCG may be able to accept people with a 10,000 person limit as long as there was approval from the chief health officer of the state or territory.
While the decisions mark another major step towards easing the rules, they came with a warning from Chief Medical Officer Brendan Murphy about the health risk of joining Black Lives Matter and other protests.
"These sort of events really are dangerous," Professor Murphy said, adding that the peak medical officers on the Australian Health Protection Principal Committee asked people not to attend the mass gatherings.
"You cannot make them safe. Despite all the attempts of organisers to try and make them safe, those sorts of events where people are crowded together, and where you can't know who is there, are inherently unsafe."
Mr Morrison also urged people to avoid the protests because of the "double standard" they set when others observed the social restrictions, but rejected calls to cancel welfare payments to those who marched.
Finance Minister Mathias Cormann left this option open earlier in the day when a Sky News host asked him whether protesters should lose entitlements and he replied: "That is a conversation that would be worthwhile having".
Asked about that comment, Mr Morrison said: "We won't do that."
Mr Morrison said on Thursday the protesters should be arrested and charged if they broke social restrictions, but he said on Friday the enforcement was a matter for state and territory authorities.
David Crowe is chief political correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.
Fleta Page is a federal politics desk editor for the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, based at Parliament House.
Rachael Dexter is a journalist & audio video producer at The Age.
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2020-06-12 04:46:35Z
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