Australia’s largest city of Sydney re-introduced “soft touch” COVID-19 curbs on Wednesday to contain a widening outbreak of the highly infectious Delta variant, mandating masks in offices while neighboring states closed their borders.
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Summary
- Workplace masks mandatory, home visits limited to five people
- Neighbouring states close borders
- Wellington alert level is one step short of lockdown
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New Zealand raised the alert level in its capital of Wellington overexposure concerns after an Australian tourist tested positive for the virus upon returning to Sydney from a weekend visit to the neighboring nation.
The latest virus cluster in Australia’s most populous state of New South Wales (NSW) has swelled to more than 30 in a week, prompting New Zealand to halt quarantine-free travel. read more
On Wednesday, the state tightened curbs for a week on gatherings and movement in Sydney, but stopped short of a full lockdown, as fears grew that the latest cluster of the highly infectious Delta variant could drive a major outbreak.
Travel was limited to essential tasks for residents of seven council areas in Sydney’s east and inner west, with home visits limited to five guests and masks mandatory indoors, even in offices and gyms. Some schools moved to online-only teaching.
“We have gone from near and present danger to a very real and present danger, not just in a shopping center but right across Sydney,” the state’s health minister, Brad Hazzard, told reporters in Sydney.
The state’s first virus cluster in more than a month was linked to a driver who transports overseas airline crew and visited several places, among them a shopping center in Bondi, thronged by tourists.
Ten new cases were reported by 8 p.m. on Tuesday but 13 further cases have been detected since.
Mandatory mask rules extended in Sydney as COVID-19 cluster grows
Neighboring states such as Victoria, the second most populous, and northeastern Queensland shut their borders to travelers from Sydney and surrounding areas, while South Australia closed its border altogether.
Snap lockdowns, tough social distancing rules, and swift contact tracing have helped both Australia and New Zealand to limit outbreaks and hold down COVID-19 infections.
Australia has reported just over 30,350 cases and 910 deaths since the pandemic began, while New Zealand recorded more than 2,300 infections and 26 deaths.
In New Zealand, Wellington will move to a ‘level 2’ alert, or one short of a lockdown, until Sunday midnight as a precaution against any potential outbreak.
New Zealand, with a population of 5 million, agreed to quarantine-free travel with Australia this year as both had reined in community spread of the virus.
But fresh outbreak worries have emerged after the positive test for the unidentified male Australian tourist, who visited more than a dozen locations from the national Te Papa museum to pubs, cafes, a bookshop, and a hotel during his trip.
“This is not a lockdown,” New Zealand’s COVID response minister Chris Hipkins told a news conference in Wellington. “These are precautionary measures which will remain in place while we contact trace and test all of those we need to.”
The level 2 alert allows offices, schools, and businesses to stay open but observe social distancing, one of the conditions on which sport and recreation activities are allowed.
But gatherings of more than 100 for events such as weddings and funerals are barred.