Fiji Sun

National Party Leader Calls for Immediate Pacific Travel Bubble

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New Zealand’s National leader Judith Collins says there’s no reason Pacific nations can’t form part of the new travel bubble now.

Ms Collins wants the Government to move quicker in allowing quarantine-free travel from Fiji, Samoa and Tonga. A bubble with Australia had been unnecessar­ily put off and that shouldn’t now be the repeated with safe Pacific nations, she told Morning Report. The Government announced on Tuesday it would operate the bubble on a state-by-state basis with Australia from April 19, but Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern warned if there was a local lockdown tourists should not rely on the Government to bail them out.

Ms Collins said the ‘traffic-light’ system announced by the Government on Tuesday was a reasonable way of assessing risk associated with any COVID-19 outbreak in Australia and determinin­g whether trans-Tasman travel needed to be paused at any point.

She agreed any decisions on travel had to ultimately be based on health considerat­ions and that business interests couldn’t take priority.

‘Pacific islands proven they could maintain COVID-free status’

But she said the Pacific islands had proven they could maintain a COVIDfree status and delaying a

Pacific bubble would hurt those nations’ economies, as well as New Zealand’s horticultu­re sector, which depended on workers from those nations.

She said a date of May 1 had already been agreed with the Cook Islands, and that she was bemused the

Government that publicly.

Ms Collins agreed any decisions on travel had to ultimately be based on health considerat­ions and that business interests couldn’t take priority.

But she said the Pacific islands had proven they could maintain a COVID-free status and delaying a Pacific bubble would hurt those nations’ economies, as well as New Zealand’s horticultu­re sector, which depended on workers from those nations.

“In the Pacific, Fiji, Tonga and Samoa, there is no COVID-19. If anywhere is safe it is those countries hadn’t announced and I don’t understand why we don’t have a Pacific bubble. That is something where the Government need to move on this,” she said. But Pasifika nations should be able to join the system immediatel­y, both to alleviate the economic hardship in those countries and to allow Pacific workers into New Zealand to take up work in the horticultu­ral sector, she said.

“I think it can be done very quickly. I’m very aware that the Cook Islands has been told the bubble with the Cook Islands will be open on 1 May, but for some reason the Government isn’t telling New Zealanders that. I don’t understand why that is being held back. “When it comes to Tonga and Samoa they haven’t had one case of COVID-19 in their countries and they’ve got a record of being able to keep it out altogether. “I think it is really important that we also look at how these countries are being extraordin­arily hit by lack of tourism, but also the RIC workers, who have been working in New Zealand.

Fiji used as an example

“They are absolutely crucial to the economy in these countries. Fiji is another example They haven’t had any COVID in the community for over a year. These are countries were they are crying out for help.” Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told Morning Report she was confident the travel bubble was safe and that there existed a good working relationsh­ip between the countries’ health authoritie­s to keep it that way.

She said there was an official communicat­ion platform operating between Australia and New Zealand and that system was working efficientl­y.

“Essentiall­y we’ve been able to share informatio­n between us, she said.

“We are confident enough of course and you’ll hear epidemiolo­gists and other experts supporting this decision. But what we are saying to travellers is just be prepared. You will have seen that we’ve had a number of pauses in the one-way arrangemen­ts we’ve had with Australia thus far and if there are outbreaks it may happen in the future.”

“If there are cases connected to border, well identified and well contained it was likely travel arrangemen­ts would continue,” she said.

“If you have a question mark over what happened and how widespread, we may need to pause the travel arrangemen­t for up to 72 hours while we gather more informatio­n. And if it’s a larger outbreak we’re likely to suspend.” A group of ministers, supported by health officials would decide whether to suspend travel or not in light of COVID-19 outbreaks. “We’ll be utilising the group of ministers in the same way we have for COVID-related decisions that need to be made with urgency... We will always be informed by the director-general of health for our decisions,” Ms Ardern

said.

 ?? Judith Collins. ?? RNZ
Judith Collins. RNZ

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