South Australia says man's 'lie' caused coronavirus lockdown as harsh
curbs eased
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[November 20, 2020]
By Wayne Cole
SYDNEY (Reuters) - South Australia's
drastic six-day coronavirus lockdown was triggered by a "lie" to contact
tracers from a man who tested positive and restrictions across the state
are set to be lifted much sooner than first planned, authorities said on
Friday.
The shock announcement came just two days after the state government
ordered people to stay at home and shut many businesses to combat what
was considered a highly contagious outbreak of coronavirus.
South Australia state Premier Steven Marshall told a media conference in
Adelaide that one man at a pizza bar tied to the outbreak told contact
tracers he had only bought a pizza there, when he had actually worked
several shifts at the food outlet alongside another worker who tested
positive.
Authorities assumed the man, who wasn't named, had caught the virus
during a very short exposure, leading them to believe the strain must be
highly contagious.
"Their (the man's) story didn't add up. We pursued them. We now know
that they lied," Marshall told reporters. "Had this person been truthful
to the contact tracing teams, we would not have gone into a six-day
lockdown."
"To say I am fuming about the actions of this individual is an absolute
understatement. This selfish actions of this individual have put our
whole state in a very difficult situation."
While the outbreak was still worrying, Marshall said restrictions would
be lifted early with a stay-at-home order ending at midnight on Saturday
when most businesses would also be allowed to open.
Asked what punishment the individual might face, Police Commissioner
Grant Stevens said there was "no penalty" for lying to tracers under the
current law, though that would likely be reviewed.
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South Australia's drastic six-day lockdown was triggered by a "lie"
to contact tracers from a single individual and restrictions across
the state would now be lifted much sooner than first planned,
Australia State Premier Steven Marshall told a media conference on
Friday (November 20). Bryan Wood reports.
"I think it is stating the obvious to say that this person's actions
has had a devastating impact on our community," said Stevens. "The
hardship is not lost on us."
Stevens said a team reviewing information provided by the man to
contract tracers wasn't satisfied with "the feeling they got from
this". Stevens would not be drawn on the man's likely motivation for
misleading contact tracers.
Home to about 1.8 million people, South Australia has recorded 25
cases from the latest cluster, linked to a returned traveller from
the UK. The number of new cases in the state was still expected to
rise over the next few days.
The country as a whole has been relatively successful on containing
the virus with only around 95 cases currently active.
The state of Victoria on Friday reported its 21st day of zero cases,
a well-earned reward for a marathon lockdown of the country's
second-largest city, Melbourne.
(Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing by Michael Perry and Kenneth
Maxwell)
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