State premiers have warned they will not be rushing to relax restrictions as the Morrison Government enters a four-week period of pandemic preparations. For restrictions to be relaxed, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said three key markers would need to be met including broader testing, enhanced contact tracing and faster reaction to localized outbreaks. Key to that effort would be Australians signing up for mobile phone tracing – an initiative Labor said it was hesitant to support. Mr Morrison said the government would hope to see at least 40 per cent of the population voluntarily sign up for the mobile phone tracking app. Labor leader Anthony Albanese said he would be “very concerned and would need a lot of convincing, as Australians would, to say that we are going to effectively force Australians to be tracked”. Meanwhile, China faces mounting scrutiny over its role in the spread and secrecy surrounding the coronavirus. Both major parties have called for an investigation into China’s actions in lead up to and surrounding the coronavirus pandemic. Image: Getty

The Prime Minister has conceded the government won’t force Australians to download tracking software after it was viewed by many as a draconian measure to trace coronavirus cases in the community.

On Friday, Scott Morrison said he wanted to make the app compulsory if enough people didn’t sign up for it because at least 40 per cent of the population needs to be on board to make it effective.

But in a tweet this morning, he confirmed it “will not be mandatory”.

“We will be seeking the co-operation and support of Australians to download the app to help our health workers, to protect our community and help get our economy going again,” Mr Morrison tweeted.

Mr Morrison had spruiked the need to make the app compulsory in an interview on Triple M yesterday, likening the use of tracing software 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.”

Government Services Minister Stuart Robert said the app, named Covid Trace, will allow health experts to more accurately track the virus in the community and allow the widespread lockdowns to be loosened.

“All it does is it allows a manual process to be sped up digitally,” he told reporters today.

“Right now if you test positive to coronavirus, health officials will sit down with you and ask you to trace back where you were and who you have been with.

“It is really hard to try to remember the 90-year-old lady in the queue behind you at a shopping centre, or a family that was close by you for whatever purpose.

“There is no geolocation, there is no surveillance, there is no tracking. The app simply connects with another app.

“If those two phones are within 1.5m for 15 minutes, it simply swaps phone numbers and names.

“That information is held encrypted and securely on the individual's mobile phone.

“You control your own data stop and if you test positive to coronavirus, that information is shot up to a secure national health storage and given straight to state governments so they can contact individuals that may have come into contact with an infected person.”

Better contact tracing is one of three main benchmarks the government wants to meet before strict restrictions can be lifted. The other two are a broader testing regime and a greater capacity to respond to local outbreaks.

Mr Morrison says the app won’t be used by police as evidence to prosecute people for breaching social distancing requirements.

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Australia’s deputy chief medical officer Paul Kelly says its rollout will begin on a voluntary basis.

It would allow contact tracers to have information immediately rather than waiting hours or even days as they currently do.

“The app would be an extra piece to this puzzle and that timeliness element is the crucial thing,” Prof Kelly told reporters in Canberra.

Labor leader Anthony Albanese – who found out about the app in the newspaper – was concerned about the prospect of forcibly being tracked.

“One of the things that would occur if that was the government response would be people would simply stop taking their phone to places,” he told reporters. “It’s up to the government, frankly, to explain exactly what it has in mind with this app and to be very clear with the Australian public about whether it is going to be voluntary or whether it is going to be some level of compulsion involved.”

Privacy issues are being worked through before an opt-in app is launched. The app is being developed based on a Singaporean version, TraceTogether. It uses Bluetooth to plot people who had spent 15 minutes or more in proximity to a person with coronavirus.

They then share the records with authorities when asked to be part of a tracing investigation.

— with AAP