Sydney's ticket out of COVID lockdown? Six million shots
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[August 03, 2021]
By Colin Packham and Renju Jose
CANBERRA (Reuters) -Australian authorities
said they could ease a COVID-19 lockdown that demands Sydney's five
million people stay home until the end of August if half the population
is vaccinated, even as new infections linger near a 16-month high.
A lifting of restrictions in the country's most populous city and its
surrounds in New South Wales state would be a boost for Prime Minister
Scott Morrison, under intense pressure https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/australian-pm-morrisons-approval-rating-slumps-slow-vaccine-rollout-2021-07-18
for his government's handling of the vaccine rollout, with the threat of
a second economic recession in as many years looming.
New South Wales, which accounts for a third of all activity in
Australia's A$2 trillion ($1.47 trillion) economy, has struggled to
contain a surge of cases of the highly infectious Delta variant in
Sydney despite the lockdown, currently due to be lifted on Aug. 29.
While the state on Tuesday reported another 199 locally acquired
COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours - near a 16-month high of 239
infections recorded in one day last week - Premier Gladys Berejiklian
said curbs could be eased if six million people in New South Wales are
vaccinated by the time the lockdown is due to end.
"Six million jabs is roughly half the population with at least one or
two doses," Berejiklian told reporters in Sydney. "That gives us
additional options as to what life looks like on 29 August."
Berejiklian didn't say exactly how many in New South Wales were fully
vaccinated as of Tuesday, but said the state is on course to meet its
vaccination target. She cautioned the number of people in the community
while infectious would also need to come down.
Although Australia has largely kept its COVID-19 numbers relatively low,
with just over 34,500 cases and 925 deaths, its national vaccination
rollout has hit several roadblocks due to changing medical advice on
AstraZeneca doses over blood clot concerns and supply constraints for
Pfizer inoculation.
The target in New South Wales comes just days after national premier
Morrison promised lockdowns would be "less likely" once the country
inoculates 70% of its population above 16 years of age - a long way from
the current 19% level. Morrison expects to hit the 70% mark by the end
of the year.
On Tuesday Morrison rejected the idea of offering people financial
incentives to boost vaccination rates.
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Medical staff work in the waiting area at a coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) vaccination clinic at the Bankstown Sports Club as the
city experiences an extended lockdown, in Sydney, Australia, August
3, 2021. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
"If [Australians] do have hesitancy about vaccine, I
am not going to pay them off," Morrison told reporters in Canberra.
The PM also released the modeling behind the national strategy which
showed Australia would need to vaccinate seven in 10 people to
control the spread of the virus without economically damaging
lockdowns.
The modelling, by the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and
Immunity, also called for younger Australians to be the next focus
of the vaccine campaign.
Once vulnerable Australians were inoculated, "uptake by young adults
(aged 16 and over) will strongly influence the impact of vaccination
on overall transmission", notes published alongside the modelling
said.
The lockdown of Sydney is expected to see the Australian economy
shrink in the current quarter, and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has
warned the length of the stay-at-home orders will determine whether
a recession can be avoided.
Despite the ongoing threat to the economy, the Reserve Bank of
Australia on Tuesday said it would stick with its plan to taper bond
buying from September, contravening marketing expectations.
Meanwhile, Queensland state said on Tuesday it has reported 16 new
COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, the highest daily number of new
cases in a year.
($1 = 1.3578 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Colin Packham in Canberra and Renju Jose and Byron
Kaye in Sydney; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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