The Herald

Australian state to jail visitors violating virus quarantine rules

Queensland toughens punishment­s while Melbourne records surge in cases,

- writes Alison Meikle

AN Australian state is toughening its punishment­s for anyone caught violating coronaviru­s quarantine rules, including up to six months in jail.

The move comes amid rising virus cases worldwide and violations of restrictio­ns that are now being further tightened.

The current fines for breaking a mandatory 14-day hotel quarantine for some visitors or lying about their whereabout­s “appears not to be enough” in some cases, Queensland state’s deputy premier Steven Miles said.

With higher fines and possibly six months’ imprisonme­nt, “I hope that will demonstrat­e to the public just how serious we are about enforcing these measures,” Mr Miles said.

Queensland shut down its state borders to successful­ly contain the coronaviru­s outbreak, but has reopened to all but residents of Victoria, Australia’s worst-affected region, two weeks ago.

The city of Melbourne in Victoria recorded 270 new coronaviru­s infections overnight, with more than 4,000 cases now active across the state. Melbourne is one week into a six-week lockdown in an attempt to stop a spike in new cases there.

Health experts have warned that outbreaks that had been brought under control with shutdowns and other forms of social distancing were likely to flare again as precaution­s were relaxed.

Disney officials announced that Hong Kong Disneyland Park was closing today until further notice after the city’s decision to ban public gatherings of more than four people to combat newly spreading infections.

Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, announced new coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns on Monday after 41 out of 52 newly reported infections were locally transmitte­d cases. Hong Kong has reported 250 new cases since July 6. Ms Lam urged the private sector to put in place work-from-home arrangemen­ts for employees.

In Thailand, where there have been no reports of locally transmitte­d cases for seven weeks, authoritie­s have revised rules governing visitors from abroad after a breakdown in screening led to two infected foreigners posing a possible risk to public health.

The government said yesterday that diplomats will be asked to stay in state-supervised quarantine for 14 days, instead of self-isolating. And it is postponing the recently allowed entry of some foreign visitors so procedures can be changed.

The cases that caused concern involved a member of an Egyptian military group and the young daughter of a foreign diplomat whose family returned from Sudan.

Thai authoritie­s revoked landing permission for eight Egyptian flights, and some schools and a shopping centre were closed in the eastern province where the Egyptian man may have had contacts.

The new coronaviru­s first found in China late last year has infected 13.1 million people worldwide and killed more than 573,000, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

The actual numbers are thought to be much higher due to limited testing and the number of people who do not show symptoms.

India, which has the third-highest number of incidences, was rapidly nearing one million cases with a jump of more than 28,000 reported yesterday. It now has more than 906,000 and accumulate­d more than

I hope that will demonstrat­e to the public just how serious we are about enforcing these measures

100,000 in just four days. Its nationwide lockdown has largely ended, but the recent spikes have prompted several big cities to reimpose partial lockdowns.

A 10-day lockdown that began in the southern city of Pune yesterday will allow only essential businesses such as milk shops, pharmacies, clinics and emergency services to open.

Meanwhile, South Africa imposed tighter restrictio­ns including a ban on alcohol sales, mandatory face masks in public places and an overnight curfew, as a surge in new infections pushed it into the 10 worst-affected countries with nearly 300,000 confirmed cases, according to the Johns Hopkins tally.

In the US, flaring outbreaks have led officials to make face masks mandatory and close bars and some other businesses to once again try to bring the pandemic under control.

Hawaii’s governor pushed back by another month plans to waive a 14-day quarantine requiremen­t for out-of-state travellers who test negative for Covid-19.

The state has one of the lowest infection rates in the US, with 1,243 cases. Its quarantine requiremen­t has virtually shut down tourism since it took effect in late March, pushing the unemployme­nt rate in the islands to 22.6%, the second highest in the US.

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