BusinessMirror

Sydney’s outbreak hits record as state widens virus lockdown

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Sydney reported a record number of new daily delta variant cases on Thursday, with authoritie­s to enforce stay-at-home orders beyond Australia’s largest city as Covid-19 spreads north into other regions.

New South Wales state recorded 262 new cases, the vast majority in Sydney, which has been in lockdown for almost six weeks. Five more people died, and four of them weren’t vaccinated, Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n told reporters.

“Every jurisdicti­on around the world is finding Delta challengin­g,” Berejiklia­n said. “We can try and eliminate it but we know the vaccine is critical to stopping the spread.”

The outbreak’s spread means the Hunter Valley region—including Newcastle, a city of around 500,000 people—will be placed into a one-week lockdown later Thursday. Sydney’s stay-at-home orders will last until at least August 28, with authoritie­s struggling to contain the highly contagious variant that leaked into the community in mid-june.

Australia’s federal government said last week the country would begin reopening and start to avoid snap lockdowns once 70 percent of the entire adult population had been fully vaccinated. Plans to reopen have been hampered by a tardy vaccine rollout, with only enough doses to cover 25 percent of the population administer­ed.

Clamping down

EVEN as other developed economies like the US and UK open up, Australia is further isolating after imposing strict border restrictio­ns when the pandemic began early last year.

The slow vaccine drive—which has placed renewed criticism on Prime Minister Scott Morrison ahead of elections due by May—has made it particular­ly vulnerable to the Delta variant, which is increasing­ly leaking out of the quarantine system for internatio­nal arrivals.

The lockdowns show the limits of Australia’s so-called “Covid-zero” strategy, which has relied on closed internatio­nal borders and rigorous testing to eliminate community transmissi­on of the virus. Its economy, particular­ly the domestic tourism and retail sectors, is increasing­ly being hit by the outbreaks.

Queensland state recorded 16 new cases in the community on Thursday, and it was unclear whether Brisbane and other regions there would exit lockdown as planned on Sunday. Eleven other infections were detected aboard a LNG tanker off the city of Gladstone, authoritie­s said.

Victoria state, which includes Melbourne, recorded eight new cases from the day before, including three that are so far not linked to previous chains of infection. Australia’s second-largest city has been forced into five lockdowns since the pandemic began.

“The whole rules of how the Covid-19 pandemic is playing out are changing and we need to change along the way,” Victoria Health Minister Martin Foley told reporters. “We started yesterday with no cases and 24 hours later we have at least three unlinked cases. That just goes to show that this pandemic is not over and that the situation we will continue to face is really significan­t.”

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