The Star Malaysia

Aussie military called in after cases spike

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Australia’s military has been called to help tackle a coronaviru­s outbreak in Melbourne – a surge in infections that has rattled the country’s second-most populous city.

Victoria has recorded double-digit increases in new daily cases for more than a week – mostly in the state capital Melbourne – representi­ng a sizeable spike in cases in a country that has otherwise successful­ly curbed Covid-19.

Health Minister Greg Hunt said yesterday that the federal government had offered the army’s support to respond to the virus outbreak, while four other states had offered help with contact tracing.

Officials said Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews had accepted the offers of assistance from the states and asked for logistical support from the army.

“This support will mean that we can get even more tests done and results back quickly – and a stronger effort to remind Victorians that if you are sick, stay home and get tested,” a state government spokespers­on said.

It comes as the country recorded its first Covid-19 death in a month, with a man in his 80s dying in Victoria, where community concern about the virus spread is ramping up.

Health officials have reported long queues at Melbourne’s coronaviru­s testing centres, where some patients were turned away from overwhelme­d facilities on Tuesday – prompting the creation of pop-up centres in several virus “hotspots”.

Major supermarke­ts in the state also reimposed buying limits on toilet paper and other essentials yesterday after an increase in demand sparked fears of a return of panic-buying.

Hunt said the situation had reached a “critical juncture” and that health authoritie­s were considerin­g local lockdowns in the worstaffec­ted areas because of the outbreak.

“Somebody has either not known or not done the right thing, so we need to be honest about that,” he said.

Australia has been an internatio­nal success story to date, recording roughly 7,500 coronaviru­s cases and 103 deaths in a population of 25 million.

Several regions are believed to be effectivel­y virus-free, with fewer than 200 known active cases across the country.

About three-quarters of those are in Victoria, which had curbed the virus through early restrictio­ns on travel and gatherings. These measures were being gradually rolled back until this week.

The new clusters emerged at Melbourne’s Stamford Plaza Hotel, which is being used to quarantine citizens returning from overseas, an H&M clothing store in the city’s north and within extended families in a couple of suburbs.

 ?? — AFP ?? One at a time: Medical workers manning a drive-through Covid-19 testing site set up at a shopping centre carpark in Melbourne.
— AFP One at a time: Medical workers manning a drive-through Covid-19 testing site set up at a shopping centre carpark in Melbourne.

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