Two
million Australians in lockdown after one coronavirus case found
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[February 01, 2021]
By Colin Packham
CANBERRA (Reuters) - About 2 million
Australians begun their first full day of a strict coronavirus lockdown
on Monday following the discovery of one case in the community in Perth,
capital of Western Australia state, but no new cases have since been
found.
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Authorities ordered a five-day lockdown of Perth after a security
guard at a hotel used to quarantine people returning from overseas
was found to have contracted the virus.
The state government said 66 people have been deemed close contacts
of the unidentified guard and none of those already tested were
infected.
"In total 13 close contacts have now tested negative and of those 11
high-risk contacts have been moved into hotel quarantine as an extra
precaution," Western Australia state Premier Mark McGowan told
reporters in Perth.
Tests on the rest of the close contacts were expected to be
completed on Monday, McGowan said.
Australia has managed to largely contain its novel coronavirus
epidemic - limiting cases to nearly 29,000 and deaths to 909 - with
the sort of decisive action seen in Perth, and tight border
controls.
A vaccine campaign is due to begin this month, which Prime Minister
Scott Morrison said would cost at least A$6.3 billion ($4.8
billion).
Australia had already pledged to spend A$4.4 billion to acquire
enough doses for its 26 million population, but Morrison said his
government had set aside a further A$1.9 billion to pay for the
roll-out.
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"The strategy is backed by an
initial allocation of around A$1.9 billion in
new support for the vaccine roll-out. This is on
top of more than $4.4 billion allocated for
vaccines purchases," Morrison said in a speech
in Canberra.
Classifying the inoculation programme as his
"first priority", Morrison said the economy must
now begin to wean itself off government
spending.
Australia has pledged more than A$250 billion in
stimulus, which has already begun to taper.
But Morrison said there was a limit to the
support government could afford.
"We are not running a blank cheque budget,"
Morrison said.
(Reporting by Colin Packham; Editing by Gerry
Doyle, Robert Birsel)
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