Australia hits 'magnificent milestone' with 80% rate of vaccinations
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[November 06, 2021]
By Lidia Kelly
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Australia reached on
Saturday a full inoculation rate of 80% of those aged 16 and older,
which Prime Minister Scott Morrison called a "magnificent milestone" on
the path to becoming one of the world's most vaccinated countries
against COVID-19.
Once a champion of a COVID-zero strategy to manage the pandemic, the
country of 25 million has moved towards living with the virus through
extensive vaccinations, as the Delta variant has proven too infectious
to suppress.
"Another, magnificent milestone, Australia," Morrison said in a video
post on Facebook. "That's four out of five, how good is that? This has
been a true Australian national effort."
While vaccinations remain voluntary on the federal level, Australia's
states and territories introduced mandatory measures for many
occupations and workers. The unvaccinated are barred from many
activities, such as dining out or concerts.
On Monday, Australia eased international border curbs for the first time
during the pandemic, but only for vaccinated people from highly
inoculated states.
Media said about 3,000 people gathered for a peaceful protest against
vaccine mandate protests in Melbourne, the capital of the southeastern
state of Victoria, which spent nearly nine months in six lockdowns
through the pandemic.
Australia has seen frequent, occasionally violent anti-vaccine rallies
during the past few months, but the movement remains small, with polls
showing the numbers of those who oppose vaccinations are in the single
digits across the nation.
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Pedestrians walk through the city centre in the wake of coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) regulations easing, following months of lockdown
orders to curb an outbreak, in Sydney, Australia, October 20, 2021.
REUTERS/Loren Elliott
The nationwide vaccination figure incorporates some
uneven levels, however.
Nearly 90% of eligible people have been fully vaccinated in the most
populous state of New South Wales, and almost 95% in the capital
Canberra, but this figure drops to just 65% in the sparsely
populated Northern Territory and Western Australia.
The country recorded 1,558 infections and 10 deaths on Saturday,
with the majority of infections in Victoria. Some parts of the
Northern Territory are in a snap, three-day lockdown, after an
outbreak grew to three cases.
Despite the Delta outbreaks that led to months of lockdown in the
two largest cities, Sydney and Melbourne, the national tally of less
than 179,000 infections and 1,587 deaths is far lower than that of
many developed nations.
(Reporting by Lidia Kelly; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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