SYDNEY (REUTERS) - Downtown Sydney and the city's eastern suburbs, which include Bondi Beach, will go into a one-week lockdown from midnight Friday (June 25) as authorities struggle to contain a spike in the highly contagious Delta Covid-19 virus variant in the city.
The Australian Medical Association, which represents doctors, said the move was not enough and called for a complete lockdown of the country’s biggest city to prevent the virus spreading and causing possible deaths.
People who live or have worked in four local government council areas in Sydney in the last two weeks have been ordered to stay at home except for urgent reasons, New South Wales state Premier Gladys Berejiklian told reporters in Sydney.
People are allowed to leave their homes only for essential work, education, grocery shopping or outdoor exercise.
"We don’t want to see this situation linger for weeks, we would like to see this situation end sooner rather than later," Ms Berejiklian said.
Authorities said they were "concerned" about a potential super-spreader event in a salon where three staff were infected and over 900 clients visited between June 15 and 23.
Officials have issued health alerts overnight for more than a dozen new venues scattered across Sydney, Australia’s largest city and home to a fifth of Australia’s 25 million population, as total infections in the outbreak topped 60.
NSW has held off calls for a hard lockdown, instead imposing mandatory masks in all indoor locations in Sydney, including offices, restricted residents in seven council areas from leaving the city and limited home gatherings to five.
These restrictions, which were scheduled to end on Wednesday, are now extended until midnight on July 2.
Twenty-two local cases were reported on Friday, the biggest rise in infections since the first was detected in Bondi last Wednesday in a limousine driver who transported an overseas airline crew.
Nineteen of these cases are linked to known infections, while three are under investigation.
Australian Medical Association President Omar Khorshid said the latest restrictions were "not quite enough" and urged officials to place the entire city under lockdown to avoid the virus spreading across the country.
Dr Khorshid warned officials the latest Sydney outbreak could get out of control and reminded officials the devastating wave of Covid-19 in Melbourne last year, which resulted in more than 800 deaths.
"hat happened in Melbourne is they tried last year to get ahead slowly and were not able to get ahead of it and it resulted in deaths ... that must not be allowed to happen in Sydney," Dr Khorshid said.
Swift contact tracing, strict social distancing rules and a high community compliance have largely helped Australia quash prior outbreaks and keep its Covid-19 numbers relatively low, with just under 30,400 cases and 910 deaths.
NSW has been effectively isolated from the rest of the country after other states reinstated tough border rules in response to the latest outbreak, including a total ban for visitors from Sydney’s virus-hit suburbs.
Neighbouring Queensland and Victoria authorities on Friday said several passengers from Sydney who attempted to enter the states by air without exemptions were sent back to Sydney.
Queensland state Chief Health Officer Jeannette Young said travellers moving between the cross-border zones with NSW must complete a travel declaration from Monday (June 28).
Victoria reported no new local Covid-19 cases beyond the two announced on Thursday, likely linked to the Sydney outbreak.
Two local cases were detected in Queensland overnight, both in home quarantine.
A conference of Australian Banking Association in Sydney where Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Philip Lowe was due to speak next week has been postponed by the organisers due to Covid-related curbs.
Related Story
Sydney isolated as fast-spreading Covid-19 cluster prompts lockdown calls
Related Story
Sydney residents banned from leaving city as coronavirus cluster grows
Related Stories:
Related Story
S'pore may ease Covid-19 rules for those vaccinated: How you would be affected
Related Story
Living normally, with Covid-19: Task force ministers on how S'pore is drawing road map for new normal
Related Story
Delta Plus, a potentially deadlier Covid-19 variant, causing concern in India
Related Story
S'pore to get batch of Covid-19 jabs called Comirnaty; same as Pfizer's: MOH
Related Story
Covid-19 counting enters new era as focus shifts to hospitalisation numbers
Related Story
Delta most prevalent Covid-19 variant in Singapore for now
Related Story
Is Asia really lagging? The Covid-19 pandemic finish line may be farther than we think
Related Story
In the wake of India's Covid-19 crisis, a 'black fungus' epidemic follows
Related Story
Malaysian experts suspect Covid-19 variants behind growing number of patients arriving dead in hospitals
Related Story
Chances to win flat, gold bars, cars drive Covid-19 vaccinations in Hong Kong
Join ST's Telegram channel here and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Topics:
Facebook WhatsApp Twitter More Whatsapp Linkedin FB Messenger Telegram Reddit WeChat Pinterest Print Copy permalink https://str.sg/3oZb