The Philippine Star

Melbourne to ease COVID lockdowns

MELBOURNE (Reuters) – Melbourne, which has spent more time under COVID-19 lockdowns than any other city in the world, is set to lift its stay-at-home orders this week, officials said yesterday.

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By Friday, when some curbs will be lifted, the Australian city of five million people will have been under six lockdowns totalling 262 days, or nearly nine months, since March 2020.

Australian and other media say this is the longest in the world, exceeding a 234-day lockdown in Buenos Aires.

While coronaviru­s cases keep rising in Victoria state, of which Melbourne is the capital, the state’s double-vaccinatio­n rate is set to reach 70 percent this week, allowing for the ease in restrictio­ns.

“Today is a great day,” said Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews in announcing the easing. “Today is a day when Victorians can be proud of what they have achieved.”

When hospitalit­y venues and some businesses reopen, their capacity will remain heavily restricted. More easing, including the reopening of many retailers, will come once 80 percent of eligible Victorians are fully vaccinated – estimated by Nov. 5 at the latest.

Yesterday, Victoria recorded 1,838 new coronaviru­s cases and seven deaths. Neighborin­g New South Wales, which emerged last week from a 100-day lockdown, reported 301 cases and 10 deaths. Eighty percent of the state’s people have been fully vaccinated.

Australia, once a champion of a COVID-zero strategy of managing the pandemic, has been moving toward living with the virus through extensive vaccinatio­ns, as the Delta variant has proven too transmissi­ble to suppress.

The new strategy makes lockdowns highly unlikely once 80 percent of the population is fully vaccinated. As of the weekend, around 68 percent of eligible Australian­s have been fully inoculated.

Australia’s health officials said yesterday that quarantine-free travel from New Zealand’s South Island, where there is no outbreak, will resume on Wednesday.

The government is also in discussion­s with Singapore about reopening travel between the two countries for the fully vaccinated.

Despite the rise in cases in recent months, Australia’s coronaviru­s numbers are low compared to many other developed countries, with just over 143,000 cases and 1,530 deaths.

Neighborin­g New Zealand, which is also learning to live with COVID-19 by accelerati­ng inoculatio­ns, reported 51 new cases yesterday, 47 of them in the largest city Auckland, which has been in a lockdown since mid-August.

On Saturday, New Zealand vaccinated more than 2.5 percent of its people as part of a government-led mass vaccinatio­n drive.

 ?? AFP ?? Bartenders work in a bar in Sydney on Oct. 11 after ending a lockdown against COVID-19. Melbourne is the second city in Australia to ease coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.
AFP Bartenders work in a bar in Sydney on Oct. 11 after ending a lockdown against COVID-19. Melbourne is the second city in Australia to ease coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

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