Otago Daily Times

Fiveday lockdown ordered for Perth

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PERTH: The city of Perth was ordered into lockdown yesterday after a security guard working in hotel quarantine tested positive for Covid19, ending the country's longest coronaviru­sfree run.

From last evening until this Friday, people in the city of 2 million must stay home, except for essential work, healthcare, grocery shopping or exercise, and visits to hospitals and nursing homes are banned, Western Australia state Premier Mark McGowan said.

Australia's fourthmost populous city had recorded no cases of the virus for 10 months, and Australia just hours earlier had announced 14 days without a locally acquired infection.

Restaurant­s, cafes and cinemas were ordered shut in Perth and surroundin­g areas were ordered shut, while a scheduled return from summer school holidays was extended by a week, after the security guard returned a positive test late on Saturday, McGowan said.

The vast, largely isolated state has been known in Australia for a hardline Covid19 response that included keeping its border closed to the rest of the country until recently, when it reopened to some regions.

‘‘I know for many Western Australian­s this is going to come as a shock,’’ Mr McGowan told a hastily scheduled news conference.

‘‘We cannot forget how quickly this virus can spread, nor the devastatio­n it can cause.’’

The security guard, aged in his 20s, was working at a hotel where four people in quarantine had active cases of the virus, including the highly contagious strains that have been linked to Britain and South Africa, the health authoritie­s said.

The man had a second job with an unspecifie­d ridesharin­g company but had not worked at his driving job since reporting symptoms on Thursday. Other people in the man's household had tested negative but were put in isolation and were expected to test positive in the coming days, they said.

The lockdown affected fourfifths of the population of Australia's geographic­ally biggest state, and the rest were asked not to travel. People from other states, only some of whom were recently allowed back into the state, were again asked to stay away.

The police would set up road checkpoint­s to question people's movements, Police Commission­er Chris Dawson told reporters, adding that the police would also enforce a new rule requiring people to wear masks in public indoor spaces and on public transport.

Australia has closed its borders since March to slow the spread of the illness that has infected 29,000 in the country and killed 909. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Mark McGowan
Mark McGowan

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