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Residents of Melbourne's locked-down public housing towers 'treated like criminals' - ABC News

It was only when Tekeste Hailu tried to leave his building that he realised he was one of 3,000 people in mandatory lockdown.

Mr Hailu, 27, lives with his grandmother in public housing on Racecourse Rd, one of nine Melbourne buildings that was placed into sudden "hard lockdown" on Saturday afternoon.

But the first Mr Hailu was told was when he tried to leave to buy groceries, only to be greeted by "the whole building surrounded by police".

"I'm thinking, what's going on, has someone died or something?" he said.

The strict restrictions are due to a rise in coronavirus cases in the public housing towers, which have 1,345 units.

People can be seen gesturing out the window of their housing unit.
Most of the buildings house hundreds of people in high-rise blocks.(ABC News: Dan Harrison)

"This is not just a matter of 23- to 30-odd people, this is a matter of many hundreds who have already been exposed and who may already be incubating," Deputy Chief Health Officer Annaliese van Diemen said on Saturday.

Premier Daniel Andrews made the announcement with Housing Minister Richard Wynne.

Other residents received a text message shortly before 5:00pm informing them that two new postcodes, 3031 and 3051, had been placed under stay-at-home orders from midnight that night.

Residents of Kensington, Flemington and North Melbourne will join 36 other suburbs in going back under stage three restrictions.

But for those living in the nine towers, an even stricter "hard lockdown" had already begun from 4:00pm.

Girmay Mengesha, who lives in one of the towers on the same road as Mr Hailu, said he was happy to comply with the new orders, but was frustrated by the lack of communication and warning.

A female police officer speaks to a man through his car window. Police cars can be seen in the background.
Police spoke to residents as they returned home.(AAP: David Crosling)

"The way they mobilised the police officers … meant they already knew," Mr Mengesha said.

"Why didn't they tell us?"

He also said he felt as though other residents of his suburb were given more time.

The towers will be completely locked down for at least five days while health officials attempt to test every resident and assess the results.

The massive police effort to enforce the lockdown will involve about 500 police per shift and see officers stationed on most floors.

"We're treated like criminals, pretty much, and they're only targeting the flats, I don't understand why it's a major target," Mr Hailu said.

"Mostly the people that live in the flats are migrant backgrounds. I just feel like, why only us? Why are they targeting us?"

Strong police presence 'going to trigger a lot of trauma'

Mr Hailu, a student and worker, emigrated to Melbourne from East Africa in 2010.

He said many young people of African descent in his community were scared of the police after a recent focus on "African gangs".

Police wearing face masks walk in front of a public housing block.
Police will be out in force inside and outside the public housing estates.(AAP: David Crosling)

"Especially with what's happening in the current situation with the police and the African background, all the youths are very terrified of the police," Mr Hailu said.

There have also been concerns raised about the lack of information in languages other than English.

By late on Saturday night, Mr Hailu said he was yet to see any professional health workers, social workers or interpreters to support the hundreds of residents in his building.

Police are scene in a grainy image from a Flemington apartment.
The view from Tekeste Hailu's Flemington unit on Saturday night.(Supplied: Tekeste Hailu)

He said many people would have willingly been tested and stayed at home if they had been asked "instead of just bombarding us with 500 police at once and locking us down".

"There was no time to have air or anything, the basic human rights. No food, no nothing, they just sent us to lockdown for five days," he said.

Residents who spoke to the ABC said they did not know what kind of financial compensation they would receive for missing out on work or study.

Mr Mengesha, who was stood down from his role at Qantas earlier this year, said he did not know whether he would be paid for the casual shifts he was meant to do at Woolworths from Monday to Friday.

Mr Hailu said it was "terrifying" to know that a lot of people had been exposed to the virus, and was worried for his 73-year-old grandmother.

"It's quite concerning … because she's in danger, more than me," he said.

But he said there could have been a different system for handling the rise in cases, with more of a focus on embedding healthcare workers in the community.

A police bus can be seen outside a public housing tower on Racecourse Road, Flemington, Melbourne.
A drug bus was parked outside the Racecourse Rd towers.(ABC News: Dan Harrison)

Dr van Diemen said living in close quarters and using shared facilities made transmission within the buildings more likely than in other locations.

She said authorities were worried there could be an "explosion of infections in a highly vulnerable community and very high rates of hospitalisations and deaths because of the background health status of a large number of people in these towers".

Victorian Public Tenants Association executive officer Mark Feenane expressed his concern that overcrowding was assisting the virus to spread.

Jenny, a resident from one of the North Melbourne towers, said physical distancing was nearly impossible in her building.

Residents from three separate towers said it was common for lifts in the high-rise buildings to be out of order on a regular basis, meaning there was one way up and down the buildings for hundreds of residents.

Jenny said she took the stairs because she was "fit and young", but that was impossible for many others.

In a statement, the Housing Minister said while the immediate focus was on the health response, attention was now turning to "wraparound support" for people living in the estates.

"That includes medical care, mental health supports, as well as the basics like food and essentials. Already, we have support staff and social workers onsite to make sure no-one is lacking those basic necessities," Mr Wynne said.

"To those Victorians who live in these estates, we will do everything we can to support you at this very challenging time."

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFiYy5uZXQuYXUvbmV3cy8yMDIwLTA3LTA1L2Nvcm9uYXZpcnVzLWxvY2tkb3duLW1lbGJvdXJuZS1wdWJsaWMtaG91c2luZy1yZXNpZGVudHMtc3BlYWsvMTI0MjMxNzDSASdodHRwczovL2FtcC5hYmMubmV0LmF1L2FydGljbGUvMTI0MjMxNzA?oc=5

2020-07-04 22:41:48Z
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