Source: RT
After calling for a “mental health commander” to join Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews, himself, and other high-ranking health officials for the state’s Covid-19 press conferences, Brett Sutton made a hasty exit from the podium when asked how the state planned to address a sharp increase in suicides among young people.
Every suicide is a terrible tragedy, but let’s not be speaking as if we can attribute with absolute certainty what motivated each of those tragic acts,” Andrews said, opining that the rise in deaths may have been caused by many factors other than the Covid-19 lockdowns that have deprived Australians of the chance to work, travel, visit friends and family, and otherwise experience joy in life.
“The alternative is that this goes on for longer and it is harsher, or we suffer hundreds of deaths – literally hundreds of deaths – from coronavirus,” Sutton had reasoned before his swift departure, arguing that not locking down would deliver worse outcomes.
Australia has had one of the toughest Covid-19-prevention regimes in the world, having earlier this month locked down the city of Melbourne for the sixth time. Previous lockdowns have seen public housing residents confined to their apartments, unable even to venture outside, cops patrolling the hallways of high-rises and groceries having to be delivered – sporadically and less than fresh – to the frazzled inhabitants. The heavy-handed restrictions won Andrews the ignominious nickname of ‘Kim Jong-Dan’.
Unlike Sutton, most Australians seemed confident about where to place the blame for the soaring suicide rate among teen girls, linking the increase in deaths with the oppressive lockdowns. Remarking that the country deserved better, social media users demanded the authorities be held to account.
As Australia stumbles through another #lockdown the evidence is mounting that they cannot be justified. Excess mortality for Sweden in 2020 0.07%, ~7200ppl. Australia recorded consistently above average from Nov 2020 (+5%), cancer, diabetes & how many suicides?#covid19AUSpic.twitter.com/hGPl7oXoyg
— Psycho Kanga (@Psychokanga) August 17, 2021
Many noted that the state government didn’t seem to care about the dead and dying so much as the control measures their deaths could be used to justify.
No two fcuks given in #Australia for suicides.
— Joe Ferrari (@JoeTalksBack) August 17, 2021
Did you see Sutton reaction re suicides … head in the sand!Stop reporting people dying that are on their death beds and start reporting what these fucking premiers are doing to the people of Australia … I hold Sutton and Daniel Andrews responsible for all these atrocities.
— David D🇦🇺🇦🇺 (@davidd27000661) August 17, 2021
However, some were ready to defend Andrews’ administration, arguing that the rise in suicides was instead the media’s fault for “encouraging dissent.”
There hasn’t even been an investigation into those suicides yet, and scum like you are trying to blame the Victorian gov’t.. You’re nothing but a low-life piece of shit…
— Radio Free Australia (@amagickeagle999) August 17, 2021
While statistics released this week showed no overall increase in suicides in Victoria during the first eight months of 2021 compared with 2020, the state acknowledged there had been a rise in suicides by teenage girls during that period. From January to August last year, deaths by suicide outnumbered deaths with the virus six to one, according to official statistics, and represented a notable increase on 2019’s self-induced deaths.
Other crimes have also risen sharply since the start of the pandemic, particularly domestic violence, with more than half of those who work in the support sector reporting an increase in both the severity and frequency of cases referred to them since Covid-19 restrictions began.
Melbourne’s lockdown was extended on Monday, with residents subject to a reimposed nighttime curfew from 9pm to 5am through at least September 2.
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