Bangkok Post

Australia, NZ mull ‘travel bubble’ amid spike in cases

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SYDNEY: New Zealand and Australia are discussing the potential creation of a “travel bubble” between the two countries, even as Australia yesterday reported its highest number of coronaviru­s cases in two weeks.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she has accepted an invite from Australian Premier Scott Morrison to take part in a meeting of Australia’s emergency coronaviru­s cabinet set for today, stoking anticipati­on of a travel deal.

The neighbouri­ng countries have claimed success in substantia­lly slowing the progress of the coronaviru­s epidemic to a level well below the United States, Britain and Europe.

Still, Ms Ardern warned that more health measures needed to be put in place before trans-Tasman travel could restart.

“I wouldn’t say it would be in the very, very near short term,” Ms Ardern said at a news conference in Wellington.

“Don’t expect this to happen in a couple of weeks time. We need to make sure we are locking in the gains all New Zealanders have helped us achieve and make sure we have health precaution­s in place.”

Australia has recorded around 6,800 infections and 96 deaths, and New

Zealand 1,137 cases and 20 fatalities. Both have a Covid-19 mortality rate of just 1% and have maintained low singledigi­t rises in new cases for weeks, successes they attribute to social distancing regulation­s and widespread testing.

“Both our countries’ strong record of fighting the virus has placed us in the enviable position of being able to plan the next stage in our economic rebuild and to include trans-Tasman travel and engagement in our strategy,” Ms Ardern said.

Meanwhile, New Zealand’s rugby league team arrived in Australia on Sunday to self-isolate before joining Australia’s tournament later this month, after receiving special permission.

The leaders will discuss ongoing measures to prevent the possibilit­y of a second wave of Covid-19 infections as they start to ease restrictio­ns that have shut businesses and hobbled their economies.

Australia yesterday reported 27 cases, including a seven-year-old boy, in its biggest daily jump in two weeks. That could rise as more states report throughout the day. New Zealand recorded no new cases yesterday for the first time since March 16.

New Zealand does not have a contact tracing app like the one launched by Australia last week to find and inform people who have been in contact with confirmed infected people.

About 4.5 million Australian­s have downloaded the CovidSafe app, well short of Mr Morrison’s announced target of 40% of the country’s estimated 16 million smartphone owners.

Mr Morrison has made adoption of the app a prerequisi­te to ease social distancing regulation­s in Australia.

The rise in Australia’s death toll was largely due to an outbreak at a meat processing plant in the state of Victoria.

 ?? AFP ?? Medical staff perform a test for Covid-19 on a driver at a drive-through testing site in Melbourne, Australia last week.
AFP Medical staff perform a test for Covid-19 on a driver at a drive-through testing site in Melbourne, Australia last week.

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