What price compassion?

WHEN Australia does a big post-mortem of its response to the COVID pandemic, what will we see?

Will we look back with pride at limiting deaths related to the virus? Or shame for sacrificing our humanity and compassion to achieve that end?

Will we wonder how we even allowed it all to happen? Or question what choices did we have as mere mortal voters in the process?

Right now, many Australians feel very powerless, which has a profoundly deep effect on our national psyche.

Divided states, mixed messaging, disproportionate responses and political posturing have broken down our trust and sense of what it is to be Australian.

In the fight against the virus, to say we’ve sacrificed our humanity and compassion along the way is no headline-grabbing exaggeration.

The stories are everywhere and continue on an almost daily basis more than 15 months since the pandemic began.

Our political leaders simply haven’t evolved or been agile in this space. If anything, they’ve become more rigid. More ruthless.

From cancer patients denied potentially life-saving treatment due to border closures, to parents being unable to be with their critical ill children, to limiting the funeral of a boy who drowned to 10 people in a country town that hadn’t seen a case of COVID for many months, the list goes on.

Even this week, I read the story of a dying father in a Queensland hospital bed being so tormented by the endless tangle of bureaucracy that he says it might be more convenient to be cremated in NSW.

Mark Kilian, who lives in the US, flew back to Sydney with his wife Anneli Gericke last week so they could spend precious last moments with Kilian’s dad Frans, an 80-year-old with pancreatic cancer.

NSW Health and the Department of Home Affairs granted them exemption to enter the country because the circumstances outweighed the risks to the community.

But Queensland Health refused the exemption to allow Kilian and Gericke into the state, meaning Frans faces the prospect of dying alone.

Mark is fully vaccinated, as is his wife. They’ve offered to wear masks 24/7. They’ll wear hazmat suits and tracking devices if need be. They’ve had three negative Covid tests in five days.

But no. Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk is standing tough. How utterly cruel.

Sadly, this sort of scenario has played out time and again for heartbroken families through this pandemic and the impacts will be long-lasting.

I have tried to place myself in the shoes of these people, but simply cannot.

If it is frustrating to try and deal with a telecommunications company, imagine the torture of being on the phone to multiple bureaucrats trying to navigate the ever-changing rules around exemptions to see your critically ill child? Or any other loved one? To feel so completely helpless. Powerless.

When Australia looks back on this chapter in our history, one learning we must take away is that we never allow power to again be at the expense of our humanity and compassion.

For those values are at the core of who we are. They can’t become who we were.

Digital Editions


  • Fighting fires in Mallee scrub

    Fighting fires in Mallee scrub

    WITH fires burning through two Mallee national parks on the weekend, and a pair of the blazes still to be contained, the environment fire crews…

More News

  • Mobile coverage upgrades on the way

    Mobile coverage upgrades on the way

    TELSTRA mobile base station upgrades at Irymple are scheduled from Thursday 27 to Saturday 31 January, with the aim of bringing a better 4G and 5G coverage to customers. The…

  • Royal commission will bring ‘momentum for change’

    Royal commission will bring ‘momentum for change’

    A ROYAL commission examining the Bondi terror attack will be an impetus for change across the community, Australia’s chief envoy for anti-Semitism says. After weeks of pressure following the 14…

  • Peg your leg at pirate pool party

    Peg your leg at pirate pool party

    AHOY me hearties! The Irymple Progress Association is holding a pirate pool party to help celebrate council grants to support engagement in the community. The party, which will be at…

  • Van-tastic laughs at the Setts

    Van-tastic laughs at the Setts

    DESPITE an aversion to public toilets, the VanLife comedians Nicky Wilkinson and Mick Neven, who are bringing their comedy show to the Setts in Mildura on Thursday 12 February, agree…

  • Circus evolution is a revolution

    Circus evolution is a revolution

    SUNRAYSIA residents don’t need to spend a fortune on tickets to Las Vegas to see a circus act, the Cirque Nouvelle is on its way to the Mildura Arts Centre…

  • Rural Aid begins new partnership

    Rural Aid begins new partnership

    RURAL Aid recently announced a partnership with WFI Insurance aimed at supporting rural communities facing disasters. Rural Aid’s association with WFI began in April 2025 when the insurance group donated…

  • Travelling Wilburys tribute band to play

    Travelling Wilburys tribute band to play

    THE Travelling Wilburys were the supergroup of the late 1980s, consisting of superstars George Harrison, Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Bob Dylan, and Roy Orbison. The group was the brainchild of…

  • Nowingi the place to be on 26 January

    Nowingi the place to be on 26 January

    NOWINGI Place is just one of the locations in Sunraysia where Australia Day celebrations will be in full swing on Monday 26 January. Mildura City Council is encouraging people to…

  • The power of creativity

    The power of creativity

    Making Artisan Chocolates for Beginners Andrew Garrison Shotts UNLEASH your creativity and elevate your chocolate-making skills with Making Artisan Chocolates for Beginners. This affordable and concise edition is a beginner-level…

  • Value for everyone

    Value for everyone

    Cr Ali Cupper Mayor Mildura Rural City Council AS I touched on in this same publication last week, Mildura Rural City Council’s financial sustainability and ensuring our residents continue get…