The Asian Age

Omicron: Australia halts reopening of border

PRIME MINISTER Scott Morrison said the muchherald­ed December 1 reopening will be delayed at least two weeks. ● AUSTRALIA’S BORDERS have been closed to most non-citizens for more than 20 months, causing labour shortages and pummelling the vital tourist in

-

Sydney, Nov. 29: Australia on Monday abruptly halted plans to reopen its internatio­nal borders to skilled workers and students, an eleventh-hour decision prompted by concerns over the Covid-19 Omicron variant.

After an emergency security meeting, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the much-heralded December 1 reopening will be delayed at least two weeks.

Australia’s borders have been closed to most noncitizen­s for more than 20 months, causing labour shortages and pummelling the vital tourist industry.

Morrison described the delay as “a necessary and temporary decision” based on medical advice.

Australia has so far detected five cases of the Omicron variant.

“The temporary pause will ensure Australia can

gather the informatio­n we need to better understand the Omicron variant,” he said.

Morrison cited new concerns about “the efficacy of the vaccine, the range of illness, including if it may generate more mild symptoms, and the level of transmissi­on.”A plan to open the border to visitors from Japan and South Korea on December 1 is also now on hold.

Australia has had some of the world's toughest and longest-lasting border restrictio­ns during the pandemic, thanks to a slow vaccine rollout.

The conservati­ve government had opened the border to Australian­s, permanent residents and Singaporea­ns, but not the estimated 1.4 million skilled workers who live in the country, who were barred from reentering if they left.

Monday’s delay will also cause worry in the country's hard-hit education sector.

According to Universiti­es Australia, an industry group, 130,000 internatio­nal students remain outside the country.. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India