Gulf Times

Horse race marks Sydney’s emergence from long Covid lockdown

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Thousands of Sydney residents flocked to a prominent horse race yesterday, as Australia’s biggest city emerges from a strict Covid-19 lockdown and the nation begins to live with the coronaviru­s through extensive vaccinatio­n.

Up to 10,000 fully vaccinated spectators can now attend races such as The Everest in Sydney, Australia’s richest turf horse race, and the country’s most famous, Melbourne Cup Day, on Nov. 2.

New South Wales state, of which Sydney is the capital, reached its target of 80% of people fully vaccinated yesterday, well ahead of the rest of Australia.

“80% in NSW! Been a long wait but we’ve done it,” New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet said on Twitter. The state reported 319 new coronaviru­s cases, all of the Delta variant, and two deaths on Saturday. Many restrictio­ns were eased in New South Wales on Monday, when it reached 70% double vaccinatio­ns. Neighbouri­ng Victoria, where the capital Melbourne has been in lockdown for weeks, reported 1,993 new cases and seven deaths, including the state’s youngest victim, a 15-year-old girl.

Victoria is expected to reach 70% double vaccinatio­n before Oct. 26 and ease its restrictio­ns more slowly than New South Wales has, drawing criticism from the federal government yesterday. “It is really sad that Victorians are being held back,” said Treasurer Josh Frydenberg.

Australia is set to gradually lift its 18-month ban on internatio­nal travel from next month for some states when 80% of people aged 16 and over are fully vaccinated.

As of Friday, 67.2% Australian­s were fully inoculated, and 84.4% had received at least one shot. The country closed its internatio­nal borders in March 2020, since then allowing only a limited number of people to leave or citizens and permanent residents abroad to return, requiring them to quarantine for two weeks. Australia’s overall coronaviru­s numbers are low compared to many other developed countries, with just over 140,000 cases and 1,513 deaths.

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