Prime Minister Scott Morrison has refused to rule out making it compulsory for Australians to download and use a controversial tracking app to help slow the spread of the coronavirus.
Mr Morrison said at least 40 per cent of the population would need to use the app – which is under development – to make it effective.
“My preference is to give Australians a go at getting it right,” he told Triple M on Friday.
“That’s my plan A and I really want plan A to work.”
The TraceTogether mobile phone app would help with better contact tracing – one of three main benchmarks the government wants to meet before strict coronavirus restrictions can be lifted.
The others are a broader testing regime and a greater capacity to quash local outbreaks.
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The tracking app is base on one used in Singapore, which tracks people’s movements with Bluetooth.
However, even in Singapore – considered a more compliant society than Australia’s – only 20 per cent of citizens have agreed to share their mobile phone data.
Mr Morrison has likened using the tracing app to national service.
“I know this would be something they might not normally do at an ordinary time but this is not an ordinary time,” he said.
“If you download this app, you’ll be helping save someone’s life.”
Mr Morrison said the app would not be used by police as evidence to prosecute people for breaching social distancing requirements.
Privacy issues are being worked through before an opt-in app is launched, probably within two weeks.
Also on Friday, Mr Morrison accused a Tasmanian aged-care worker of lying about who they had been in contact with – as the state grapples with a cluster of coronavirus cases in its north-west.
He said the case was a classic example of why a tracking app would be so important.
“We’ve had someone down there not tell the truth to the contact tracers about where they’d been and who they’d been with, and that means that a lot of people have been put at risk in north-west Tasmania,” he said.
“This has been very unhelpful.”
The worker has exposed three aged-care homes to the deadly virus. Tasmanian Premier Peter Gutwein has since flagged tougher restrictions for the state.
Elsewhere, Victoria recorded just a one new case of coronavirus overnight on Thursday – prompting Premier Daniel Andrews to hint at a deadline for COVID-19 restrictions.
“We are a day closer to the other side of this virus, a day closer to potentially lifting these rules,” he said.
“We’re seeing some significant stability to these numbers and that is the product of some tough rules and the fact that the vast majority of Victorians are following those rules.”
But he said the state would boost “detective work and boost our testing” before any easing of virus regulations.
“The last thing Victoria will agree to is anything that will jeopardise the progress we have made,” he said.
“If we can relax restrictions in certain areas safely, and the reward far exceeds, the risk – then that’s what we will do.”
In NSW, the news was less good. Health authorities confirmed 29 new virus infections – an increase of more than double Thursday’s cases.
NSW chief health officer Dr Kerry Chant said there had been 15 new infections at Anglicare’s Newmarch aged-care facility. The total number of the home’s staff and residents who have tested positive for the coronavirus is 30.
A seven-week-old boy is also among the new infections in NSW.
Queensland had six new coronavirus cases on Friday, bringing its total to 1007.
Tweet from @AnnastaciaMP
-with AAP
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