Melbourne Court Hears That Victorian Government Deems Tower Lockdowns ‘Reasonable’ Despite Offering Compensation of $2,200 per Adult

The Victorian government continues to justify placing thousands of public housing tower residents into a sudden Covid-19 lockdown but has agreed to pay each adult resident $2,200.

A class action was brought against the state in 2021 after about 1,800 adults and 751 children were locked inside nine public housing towers in North Melbourne and Flemington from 4 July to 18 July in 2020.

Residents in the towers, who were not given any notice or warning before being locked inside their homes for two weeks, claimed they were falsely imprisoned by the government and were threatened with physical harm if they tried to leave.

Earlier this year, the state government offered to settle with the group for $5m.

The money will be distributed among those in the class action. The government’s lawyers told the supreme court on Monday that each adult will receive $2,200 and each child $1,130.

However, government barrister Georgina Costello KC said the settlement did not mean the state would admit to any fault.

“The towers lockdown was an emergency response that was lawful, necessary and proportionate … for the purpose of protecting the lives of tower residents,” she told the court.

She argued the government’s detention of those inside the towers complied with the relevant legislation.

“The deprivation of liberty was reasonable and demonstrably justifiable,” Costello said.

She said residents were supported during the lockdown as they were offered welfare, food and medical services, and the rest of the state was also locked down between eight and 32 hours later.

“It’s a realistic settlement in light of the confinement in their homes, the welfare support they received and the fact that there were significant restrictions on liberty in Victoria at that time,” she said.

Idris Hassan, a lead plaintiff, said the lockdown had an “indelible psychological impact” on him and compared it to living in Somalia during the civil war.

“During the experience of the lockdown he saw himself as a child in the ravages of a war zone,” his barrister, Juliet Lucy, said.

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