Bangkok Post

Fresh cases hit new low in Australia

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SYDNEY: Australia looked set to record its lowest daily increase in new coronaviru­s cases in three months yesterday as a hard lockdown in the city of Melbourne brought the country’s virus epicentre down sharply.

The second-most populous state Victoria, of which Melbourne is the capital, reported 14 new infections in the 24 hours to yesterday morning, down from 21 new cases the day prior and its lowest since June 19.

That put Victoria, which has spent months under lockdown to slow a second wave of infections, on track to meet a target of keeping average daily increases below 50 by Sept 28, when authoritie­s have said they may lift restrictio­ns.

Australia’s biggest state New South Wales (NSW), which has Sydney as the capital, reported two new cases, while Queensland also reported two, bringing the national total to 18, the lowest national tally since June 23. The five other states and territorie­s had not reported daily case numbers by yesterday morning, but have reported no increases most days for weeks.

“There will of course always be debates about timing and whether we’re on schedule, ahead of schedule, all of those things, [but] ultimately these numbers are cause for great optimism and positivity,” Victorian state Premier Daniel Andrews told a news conference.

Mr Andrews, who has faced political pressure domestical­ly for his hard-line approach to enforcing restrictio­ns of movement, invoked recent spikes in infection rates in Europe as a warning about the possible effect of exiting the lockdown too soon.

“It’s heartbreak­ing to see, all that those communitie­s have given, all the sacrifice that they’ve made, and now they’ve got cases running perhaps more wildly than their first wave,” he said. “You’ve got to see it off.”

Victoria also recorded five additional deaths associated with the virus and NSW reported one new death in the prior 24 hours, taking the national death toll to 850, according to government data. The country has reported just under 26,900 infections.

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