The Star Malaysia

NSW enacts strict restrictio­ns

Australian state rolls out tough measures to slow virus spread

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People in Australia’s most populous state of New South Wales, the epicentre of the coronaviru­s outbreak in Australia, could be heavily fined or jailed for leaving their home without a good reason under sweeping new powers designed to slow infection rates.

The public health order, enacted late on Monday, comes amid warnings that it is too early to tell whether an apparent slowdown in infection rates across the country in recent days meant the outbreak was being brought under control.

“What we need to consider is the community-to-community transmissi­on that we might not even know about,” New South Wales (NSW) Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n said in Sydney yesterday.

“It is really important for us, at this stage of the virus, for us to maintain that level of control and contain it as much as possible.”

NSW has 2,032 confirmed cases of the virus, almost half the country’s total, authoritie­s said. The national death toll stands at 19.

The state is among several bringing in penalties from yesterday, including fines of up to A$11,000 (RM29,322) in NSW and the potential of a six-month prison term for anybody found breaching the new rules.

New orders restrict public gatherings to just two people, or a family unit, while outside gyms and parks will be shut.

People will still be able to leave their homes for valid reasons such as to visit a doctor, buy food and exercise while adhering to social distancing rules.

Authoritie­s yesterday said they wanted to increase testing, especially in areas of Covid-19 clusters such as Sydney’s Bondi area, which drew attention earlier this month after people ignored social distancing rules and flocked to the beach.

Kerry Chant, NSW Chief Health Officer, said that the virus may have been transmitte­d in the Bondi community via an infected backpacker who was not aware they were carrying the disease.

Chant yesterday said that an apparent slowing infection rate in recent days may have more to do with fluctuatio­ns with testing numbers, given there is less access to doctors over the weekend.

“I’m urging increased testing and particular­ly aligned to active clusters and community transmissi­on,” Chant said.

Like all affected countries, Australia’s financial and jobs markets have been roiled by the virus, prompting the government to unveil several stimulus packages. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Ghost town: a street is left empty in The rocks neighbourh­ood in sydney after the public health order was out into effect in new south Wales. — Bloomberg
Ghost town: a street is left empty in The rocks neighbourh­ood in sydney after the public health order was out into effect in new south Wales. — Bloomberg

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