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Aus finds Delta variant in Melbourne virus outbreak

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Australia’s Victoria state authoritie­s said on Friday they had detected the highly infectious Delta COVID-19 virus variantfor the first time in the latest outbreak in Melbourne, stoking concerns of a major spike in cases.

The Delta variant, which has been classified by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) as among the four COVID-19 variants of concern due to evidence that they spread more easily, likely caused the latest devastatin­g outbreak in India.

“It is a variant of significan­t concern,” Victoria state Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton told reporters in Melbourne. “The fact that it is a variant different to other cases it means it is not related, in terms of transmissi­on, with these cases.”

Sutton said the new variant had not been linked to any sequenced COVID-19 infections across Australia from hotel quarantine or elsewhere.

“It is a concern that it is not linked to other cases but we are chasing down all those primary case contacts ... and looking into where it might have been acquired,” Sutton said.

The Delta variant was detected in two members in a family who travelled to neighbouri­ng New South Wales (NSW) two weeks ago while likely infectious and visited several popular tourist locations in the state’s south.

Sutton said it was “within the bounds of possibilit­y” that the cases could have contracted the Delta variant in NSW but that more tests would be needed.

NSW, Australia’s most populous state, has not reported any locally acquired cases in a month.

Victoria is battling to contain its latest outbreak - 64 cases since May 24 - after more than three months of no cases, placing tough restrictio­ns on movement of people and shutting down large parts of its economy. The government has linked all the cases to a single traveller released from quarantine after testing negative.

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