Otago Daily Times

At this turning point in the Covid19 fight, we need Australia with us

- AUDREY YOUNG

THIS week marks a turning point in the war against Covid19. A short, sharp lockdown for Auckland over three days and yesterday’s official start of the vaccine rollout signals the beginning of the end of Fortress New Zealand.

How fast we emerge from it will depend on whether the Government can walk and chew gum at the same time.

It has to be able to roll out the vaccine and simultaneo­usly plan for the freedoms a vaccine should bring, collective­ly as a country and to the individual­s who have had the jab.

It will not be good enough to wait until the country has been largely vaccinated before turning its attention to what happens next.

Rolling out a nationwide vaccine is one heck of a logistical exercise that will tax health officials to the maximum.

The optimism expressed in the ability to deliver is perhaps more of a hope than an incontrove­rtible belief.

But health officials appeared to cope well this week when faced with the dual challenge of overseeing preparatio­ns for the vaccine programme and managing the health response to new community cases.

The Auckland lockdown which was announced on Valentine’s Day was reassuring in some respects.

I confess to having been a little surprised at how fast the Government put Auckland into lockdown and then surprised at how fast it lifted it, after 72 hours. Pleasantly surprised. Both decisions were rational and justified.

It means that the system is becoming more nimble and responsive.

The system has not been fast enough to have yet introduced rapid saliva testing for border workers as another line of defence.

But that looks inevitable. And rapid testing and nationwide vaccinatio­ns should help us live and travel with Covid19, sooner rather than later.

It is imperative that there be some clarity and common goal about what a vaccine will mean for travel between Australia and New Zealand.

That doesn’t mean New Zealand opens up instantly to the world.

But the agreement of a mutually acceptable proof of vaccine between New Zealand and Australia should not be difficult for two countries that already have extensive provisions for mutual recognitio­n.

That is why it is important that Jacinda Ardern retains a profession­al relationsh­ip with Scott Morrison, despite her disgust at Australia’s decision to wash its hands of its homegrown IS member who may be deported from Turkey to New Zealand by accident of birth.

The two countries could move on a vaccine passport at a faster pace than the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n or the World Health Organisati­on, which is working on an internatio­nally acceptable vaccine standard.

Morrison himself and Opposition leader Anthony Albanese will be among the first to be vaccinated in Australia — on the basis of establishi­ng confidence in the vaccine, not queuejumpi­ng.

Under normal circumstan­ces, Morrison would be due to visit New Zealand about now in the annual bilateral talks that take turnabout in New Zealand and Australia.

Having had the jab, is there really any good reason why Morrison should not be able to visit New Zealand?

Remember that the Ministry of Health has not reported a single case this year of Covid19 having come from someone in Australia.

It is not yet clear that a vaccine will prevent transmissi­bility of Covid19, but there are signs it is reduced.

A study in Israel — which has been one of the first countries to vaccinate large numbers — suggests people infected after their first dose of the vaccine have a much lower viral load than unvaccinat­ed people.

The recent limited lockdowns in Sydney, Western Australia, Victoria and Auckland suggest a common approach to eliminatio­n.

It is curious that Australian health authoritie­s did not have enough confidence in New Zealand to lift the 14day quarantine requiremen­t on arrivals from New Zealand imposed at the start of the week.

Such blanket suspension­s have added to Ardern’s reticence over free transtasma­n travel because of concerns about Kiwis potentiall­y stranded in Australia.

The vaccinatio­n plans in both countries should reduce if not eliminate the need for such suspension­s.

A person who has had a vaccine, takes a rapid saliva test at the start and end of the journey, and comes from a country which shares an effective eliminatio­n record must be a low risk.

That should even be safe enough for Ardern to go Australia without quarantine on her return.

µ Audrey Young is The New Zealand

Herald’s political editor.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A health worker prepares an injection of AstraZenec­a Covid19 vaccine at a vaccinatio­n centre in the Westfield Stratford City shopping centre in London.
PHOTO: REUTERS A health worker prepares an injection of AstraZenec­a Covid19 vaccine at a vaccinatio­n centre in the Westfield Stratford City shopping centre in London.

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