Daily Dispatch

N Zealand celebrates eliminatio­n of coronaviru­s transmissi­on

-

New Zealand has eliminated transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s domestical­ly and will lift all containmen­t measures except for border controls, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on Monday, making it one of the first countries to do so.

Public and private events, the retail and hospitalit­y industries and all public transport could resume without social distancing norms still in place across much of the world, she said.

“While the job is not done, there is no denying this is a milestone ... Thank you, New Zealand,” Ardern told reporters.

The South Pacific nation of about five million people is emerging from the pandemic largely due to 75 days of restrictio­ns, including about seven weeks of a strict lockdown in which most businesses were shut and everyone except essential workers had to stay at home.

“Today, 75 days later, we are ready,” Ardern told a news conference, announcing the government would drop social distancing restrictio­ns from midnight on Monday and move to a level 1 national alert from level 2.

Border controls would remain and everyone entering the country would be tested, she said.

There were no active cases in New Zealand for the first time since the virus arrived in late

February, the health ministry said.

New Zealand has reported 1,154 infections and 22 deaths from the disease.

New Zealand vowed to eliminate, not just contain, the virus. This meant stopping transmissi­on for an extended period after the last known case was cleared, while being ready to quickly detect and isolate any new cases.

New Zealanders cheered the lifting of curbs and the topic quickly trended on Twitter. Rugby fans in particular were looking forward to attending stadiums to watch the opening games of the domestic competitio­n this weekend.

Ardern, 39, has won global praise for her leadership during the pandemic and her popularity has seen stratosphe­ric growth over the last few months.

She is well placed to win a second term in office in September elections, according to recent opinion polls.

Even so, the government will need to show it is up to the task of reviving the economy, which is expected to sink into recession.

Ardern did not commit to a timeline for a proposed “travel bubble” to open with Australia.

“We will need to move cautiously here. No one wants to jeopardise the gains New Zealand has made.

There were no active cases for the first time since the virus arrived in late February

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa