The Jerusalem Post

Sydney enters two-week hard COVID closure

- • By LIDIA KELLY

MELBOURNE (Reuters) – Sydney and some surroundin­g areas entered a hard two-week COVID-19 lockdown on Saturday as authoritie­s struggle to control a fast-spreading outbreak of the highly infectious Delta variant that has grown to 80 cases.

Parts of Sydney, Australia’s biggest city, were already under lockdown due to the outbreak, but health authoritie­s said cases and exposure sites were increasing too rapidly.

“Even though we don’t want to impose burdens unless we absolutely have to, unfortunat­ely this is a situation where we have to,” said New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n.

Australia has been more successful in managing the pandemic than many other advanced economies through swift border closures, social distancing rules and high compliance, reporting just over 30,400 cases and 910 COVID19 deaths.

But the country has confronted small outbreaks in recent months. These have been contained through speedy contact tracing, isolation of thousands of people at a time or snap hard lockdowns.

Rugby Australia was searching for alternativ­e sites for Australia’s series-opening contest against France, which was to have been played at the Sydney Cricket Ground on July 7.

Saturday’s lockdown in New South Wales will also include the regions of Blue Mountains,

Central Coast and Wollongong, which surround Sydney, a city of 5 million people.

Under the rules in place through July 9, people may leave home for essential work, medical care, education or shopping. The rest of the state will have limits on public gatherings and masks will be obligatory indoors.

“There was no point doing it for three days or five days because it wouldn’t have done the job,” Berejiklia­n told a news briefing.

New Zealand on Saturday halted quarantine-free travel from Australia for three days, saying there were too many cases and outbreaks. The two neighbors, which keep their borders closed to the rest of the world, began free travel in April.

Berejiklia­n’s conservati­ve state government was reluctant to impose the lockdown, but a growing number of health experts called for it, as Australia struggled with its vaccinatio­n rollout.

Michael Kidd, Australia’s deputy chief medical officer, said 28% of people aged 16 or older have received their first COVID-19 vaccine shot. Of the 7.2 million administer­ed doses, 5.8 million were first doses.

Although free, vaccines are available for now only to people over 40 and those in risk groups either due to their health or work. The Pfizer vaccine is administer­ed to people 40 to 59 years old, and the AstraZenec­a PLC shot to those older.

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