Shanghai Daily

Sydney schools begin reopening

- (Reuters)

THOUSANDS of children returned to school in Sydney yesterday, putting an end to months of home learning as Australia’s largest city eased more COVID-19 curbs, thanks to rising rates of vaccinatio­ns.

Masks are no longer mandatory in offices and larger groups are to be allowed in homes and outdoors after the state of New South Wales, home to Sydney, hit a double-dose inoculatio­n rate of 80 percent at the weekend among those older than 16.

The latest in a series of planned relaxation­s is part of a shift in strategy by Australia’s largest cities towards living with the virus, though officials have warned it will bring more COVID-19 cases.

“This is not over,” state premier Dominic Perrottet said yesterday, urging people to stick to the remaining health rules.

“There is a long journey to go.”

Shops, gyms and pubs can allow more vaccinated users while nightclubs can reopen to serve drinks to seated patrons, and limits on the number of guests at weddings have been dropped.

But all must follow social distancing measures.

Yesterday’s return to the classroom has been staggered, as the youngest and eldest — those in kindergart­en, year 1 and year 12 go back — with all the rest scheduled for next week.

New South Wales’ 265 new cases was the lowest single-day rise in 10 weeks, far off September’s high of 1,599.

The neighborin­g state of Victoria reported 1,903 new cases, up from 1,838 the previous day. Its capital, Melbourne, is on track to begin exiting its lockdown on Friday, as full vaccinatio­n levels near 70 percent.

The city has spent about nine months under strict stay-home orders since March 2020 — the world’s longest such stint, say Australian media.

Authoritie­s in northeaste­rn Queensland, which is free of COVID-19, said quarantine­free travel for fully vaccinated residents from Sydney and Melbourne would begin from December 17, when the state’s full vaccinatio­n rate is expected to top 80 percent.

“That is good news for families to be reunited for Christmas,” said the Queensland premier, Annastacia Palaszczuk.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China