The Herald (South Africa)

Australian PM gets Covid-19 vaccine in step towards normal

- Paulina Duran

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison received the first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine yesterday, calling the start of the nation’s vaccinatio­n programme a “massive step” that will enable it to return to normal.

Up to 4-million Australian­s are expected to be inoculated by next month, with Morrison among a small group receiving the first round of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.

“This is the beginning of a big game change,” Morrison said moments after getting injected at a medical centre in Sydney.

“Every day that goes past from here gets more normal. And that is what is exciting about today.”

The intergover­nmental national cabinet is to review how its five-stage vaccinatio­n programme will change the way the country manages the risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on in the future, including at its state and internatio­nal borders.

Australian states have introduced some of the strictest community mobility restrictio­ns in the world to manage the spread of the virus, including intermitte­nt city lockdowns, curfews and border closures.

Reporting a second consecutiv­e day with no coronaviru­s transmissi­on in the community,

the nation has had just under 29,000 infections and 909 deaths since March, ranking among the top 10 in a Covid19 performanc­e index.

Morrison said the vaccine addresses his greatest fear as prime minister: “serious disease and the sort of widespread fatalities that we saw overseas.”

A small number of older Australian­s at the Castle Hill Medical Centre in western

Sydney, aged-care staff, and front-line nurses and workers were also among the first injected, officials said.

From this morning, a broader “phase 1-A” rollout is to begin among aged-care and disability staff, and border protection and quarantine workers at vaccine hubs nationwide.

“Phase 1-B” vaccinatio­ns of immunocomp­romised people and those over 70 years old, as well as indigenous Australian­s

over 55 years old and emergency service workers, are to follow. The vast majority of the population will be injected with the AstraZenec­a vaccine, which can be produced locally, by the end of October.

On Saturday, thousands of people attended anti-vaccine rallies in major Australian cities to protest against what they incorrectl­y believed to be mandatory vaccinatio­ns.

 ?? Picture: STRINGER/JOEL CARRETT/ REUTES ?? GETTING THE JAB: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison joins aged care resident Jane Malysiak as she receives the first Covid-19 vaccine in Australia during a visit to Castle Hill Medical Centre to preview the vaccinatio­n programme on Sunday, in Sydney, Australia
Picture: STRINGER/JOEL CARRETT/ REUTES GETTING THE JAB: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison joins aged care resident Jane Malysiak as she receives the first Covid-19 vaccine in Australia during a visit to Castle Hill Medical Centre to preview the vaccinatio­n programme on Sunday, in Sydney, Australia

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