The Pak Banker

Source of New Zealand coronaviru­s outbreak still a mystery

- WELLINGTON -AFP

Almost a week after the discovery of New Zealand's first locally transmitte­d coronaviru­s outbreak in more than three months, its origin remains a mystery.

The Pacific island nation had benefited from its remoteness early in the pandemic, when Ardern swiftly closed off the internatio­nal border and imposed one of the world's toughest lockdowns. Those measures stamped out local transmissi­on for 102 days. Genome testing of the latest batch of infections has confirmed it is a new strain, officials have said, probably from Australia or Britain.

With the clock ticking to get the latest outbreak under control, that has raised the tricky question of how it entered a country that has been largely closed off for months. Here are some details on what authoritie­s have called the 'Auckland August cluster'.

The earliest case authoritie­s have identified to date is a 50-year-old man who works at an Auckland cool store owned by U.S.-based Americold Realty Trust (COLD.N), who became ill around July 31. The man took a COVID-19 test in Auckland after experienci­ng symptoms for a few days.

The man's case, along with those of three direct family members, was made public by Ardern during a late night news conference on

Aug. 11. Officials revealed that family members had travelled to other cities, including Rotorua and Hamilton, and visited an aged care centre while symptomati­c.

There are now 78 active cases, of which 58 are linked to the Auckland family cluster, with infections reported at workplaces, schools, homes and public areas. The remaining 20 cases are people in mandatory quarantine facilities after arriving in New Zealand from abroad.

This is the major question still facing authoritie­s, given the internatio­nal border has been closed to foreigners since March and all returning New Zealanders have been forced into mandatory 14-day quarantine.

Authoritie­s have said contact tracing and genomic testing found no links to the country's border entry points or managed quarantine facilities yet. Genome sequencing disproved the theory from some health experts that the virus could have been quietly moving through community since the original outbreak, they added.

The government earlier suggested that the virus may have entered the country through freight, with a focus on the Auckland Americold facility where several infections have now been reported. Surface testing is underway at the facility. Australian authoritie­s are conducting genome testing on workers from a Melbourne Americool facility, seeking any connection.

New Zealand's

Health

Chief

Ashley

Bloomfield has since said said human-tohuman transmissi­on is the most likely culprit, with surface transmissi­on "unlikely".

Opposition parties and government critics have pointed to a breach at one of New Zealand's quarantine facilities as the likely conduit for the virus. Local media has reported several instances of security slip-ups at the facilities. The government has said there is no evidence to support that theory, although testing is continuing. It has not detailed any alternativ­e pathway.

Ardern has locked down the country's biggest city, Auckland, and brought back social distancing restrictio­ns more widely for two weeks.

 ?? MINSK
-AFP ?? Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko gestures as he delivers a speech during a rally of his supporters near the Government House.
MINSK -AFP Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko gestures as he delivers a speech during a rally of his supporters near the Government House.

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