The Pak Banker

COVID-free: Australian state resumes activities

-

Australia's most populous state said that from Monday it would remove limits on the number of people at weddings, bars and religious services and end a ban on public venue dancing as a run of coronaviru­s-free days prompted a broad downgrade of social distancing rules. The changes announced by New South Wales (NSW) on Wednesday come in time for Australia's summer holidays and Christmas celebratio­ns, and mark the biggest lifting of precaution­ary measures since nationwide lockdowns began in March to slow the spread of COVID-19.

People in the state, where a third of Australia's 25 million population lives, would also be allowed to drink standing up at pubs, while seated outdoor events could host up to 5,000 people. Outdoor stadiums could operate at full capacity and theatres at 75%, authoritie­s the state capital Sydney said.

NSW has recorded no locally-acquired infection for nearly four weeks. "We're deeply grateful that since the beginning of the pandemic, the community has taken our advice (and) led the way throughout the nation and we want that to continue," NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n told reporters. "Because of that, we are in the strong position we are (in) today."

Though Australia has reported some new coronaviru­s cases in returned travellers in quarantine, the country has largely stopped community transmissi­on of the virus with contact tracing, distancing measures and mandatory mask-wearing.

None of the country's eight states and territorie­s had reported a locally-acquired infection in the 24 hours to Wednesday. In NSW, some distancing measures will stay when the restrictio­ns are lifted from Monday: the headcount limit was removed, but there were still limits of one person per two-square-metres rule at most indoor venues. Dancefloor­s are still capped at 50 people, while drinking and standing is only allowed outside. For Sydney wedding planner Belinda Brett, the lifting meant a return to business as usual after nearly a year of disruption.

"This will stop the rest of our postponeme­nts," said Brett, who estimates she has had up to 30 clients put off weddings this year. "Dancing's such a key part of the cultural tradition of a lot of weddings, equally mingling. A lot of clients didn't want to spend the budget on a wedding where you walk in a room and sit at a table all night."

The US Transporta­tion Department said Tuesday it has made preparatio­ns to enable the "immediate mass shipment" of COVID-19 vaccines and completed all necessary regulatory measures. The department said U.S. agencies have been coordinati­ng with private sector companies that will carry vaccines from manufactur­ing facilities to distributi­on centers and inoculatio­n points.

It added it has establishe­d "appropriat­e safety requiremen­ts for all potential hazards involved in shipping the vaccine, including standards for dry ice and lithium batteries used in cooling."

The department is preparing to ensure deliveries of vaccine doses for about 40 million U.S. residents through January, or about 20 million a month, officials told Reuters. Healthcare workers and others recommende­d for the first inoculatio­ns could start getting shots within 24 hours after the vaccine receives regulatory authorizat­ion, the chief adviser for the US government's Operation Warp Speed program said on Tuesday. Pfizer Inc has applied for an emergency use authorizat­ion from the US Food and Drug Administra­tion for its vaccine.

 ?? -AP ?? US President-elect Joe Biden gestures to reporters as he arrives to announce nominees and appointees to serve on his economic policy team at his transition headquarte­rs in Wilmington, Delaware, US.
-AP US President-elect Joe Biden gestures to reporters as he arrives to announce nominees and appointees to serve on his economic policy team at his transition headquarte­rs in Wilmington, Delaware, US.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan