The Star Malaysia

Sydney gets ‘blueprint for freedom’

Vaccinated residents to emerge from lengthy lockdown by mid-october

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Sydney: Vaccinated Sydney residents will finally emerge from a lengthy Covid-19 lockdown by mid-october, Australian officials said, outlining a “blueprint for freedom” as case numbers fell in the city.

Stay-at-home orders are set to be lifted in Sydney and surroundin­g New South Wales when the double-dose vaccinatio­n rate hits 70%, with state premier Gladys Berejiklia­n saying “quite confidentl­y” that was now expected to occur on Oct 11.

Shuttered pubs, restaurant­s and shops will be allowed to reopen to the vaccinated while friends and families living across Australia’s biggest city will be able to reunite for the first time in more than three months.

“It is just this week and next week that we have to hang in there for,” Berejiklia­n said yesterday.

“We are nearly, nearly there, and let’s not give up at the last minute.”

Deputy premier John Barilaro said the “blueprint for freedom” would allow travel across New South Wales once 80% of over-16s

are fully vaccinated, which is likely by the end of October.

Restrictio­ns on guest numbers at funerals and weddings would be lifted at the same time, while sporting fixtures would also be permitted to resume.

However, unvaccinat­ed adults will need to wait until at least Dec 1 to enjoy the same freedoms, when it is predicted that around 90% of the eligible population will be vaccinated, officials said.

The announceme­nt came as new daily cases dipped below 800 in New South Wales on Monday – down from peaks of around 1,500 earlier in September – and the number of adults with at least one vaccine dose reached 85%.

Berejiklia­n warned that hospitals still faced being overwhelme­d by a surge in Covid-19 patients in the coming weeks.

“We know that once we start reopening at 70% double dose that the case numbers will go through the roof,” she said.

“But what will protect us is the fact that so many people have received at least the first dose of the vaccine and those people will have that extra layer of protection against ending up in hospital or worse.”

Australia has been grappling with a winter spike in the highly contagious Delta coronaviru­s variant that forced its two biggest cities, Sydney and Melbourne, into months-long lockdowns.

But a once-sluggish vaccine rollout has picked up pace across the country, prompting leaders to outline cautious reopening plans including the mooted resumption of internatio­nal travel by the end of this year.

Authoritie­s also announced yesterday that stay-at-home orders for Canberra residents will be lifted on October 15 with bars, beauty salons and gyms among the businesses set to reopen.

About 400,000 people in the nation’s capital have been under lockdown since mid-august as officials struggled to quash a small but sustained virus outbreak.

 ?? ?? Empty venue: police patrolling Lunar park in melbourne during an antilockdo­wn rally earlier this week.
Empty venue: police patrolling Lunar park in melbourne during an antilockdo­wn rally earlier this week.

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