From the BBC:
“Australia Covid: Seventh city
locks down amid vaccine chaos”
Seven Australian cities are now
in lockdown as authorities scramble to prevent the spread of the highly
contagious Delta coronavirus variant. Officials reported a slight case rise on
Wednesday, to more than 200 cases. Nearly half the population - more than 12
million people - are under stay-at-home orders in Sydney, Brisbane, Perth,
Darwin, Townsville and the Gold Coast. On Wednesday, the outback town of Alice
Springs also entered a snap lockdown after cases emerged in South Australia. Authorities
fear the virus could now spread to nearby Aboriginal communities which are
already vulnerable. Across the country on Wednesday, state leaders said they
were facing a "pressure cooker situation" as new cases emerged. Many
leaders have urged faster vaccinations as just 5% of the population is fully
vaccinated. But messaging around the country's main vaccine, the
AstraZeneca jab, has been contradictory.
Analysis box by Shaimaa
Khalil, Australia correspondent If you woke up in Australia today, you'd be
forgiven for being confused about vaccinations. There's been the slow rollout,
the lack of supply, and vaccine hesitancy. Now, add mixed messaging from the
leadership to this list and you've got a perfect storm. In a big U-turn
on Monday Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced that anyone under 40 who
wants the AstraZeneca vaccine could have it after talking to their GP. That
message was quickly rejected by the Australian Medical Association's president,
who said it took him by surprise and went against expert advice. The Australian
Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (ATAGI) recommends AstraZeneca for
over 60s.
State premiers then also accused
the PM of wrong guidance, while criticising the shortage of the Pfizer
alternative. Delta has breached Australia's defences faster than
anticipated. It's underlined how slow and at times shambolic the vaccine
rollout has been. Australia remains in an enviable position globally,
with an overall low number of Covid-19 cases and deaths. But the next
few weeks will be crucial - with the country's Covid success now hanging in the
balance. The Delta variant has been found in five of eight states and
territories, just a fortnight after it emerged in Sydney. Australia had
prevented wider Covid transmission for the past year through stringent
measures. These included closed borders, hotel quarantine and aggressive
contact tracing systems. But leaks from quarantine have highlighted gaps
in the country's defences. It has also exposed the vulnerability of a
largely unvaccinated population. Mr Morrison has been widely criticised for the
vaccine rollout's failures.
Calls to tighten borders On
Wednesday, Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk also called for a crackdown
on international arrivals. She said the state's concerning new Delta
cases had come from a business traveller from Indonesia who had infected a
hospital receptionist. Three cities in the state - Brisbane, Townsville and the
Gold Coast - entered a three-day lockdown on Tuesday. "The person
who brought the virus into Queensland was a regular traveller, not a vulnerable
Australian returning home... I honestly think we need a serious discussion
about ensuring that people are vaccinated coming into this country," said
Ms Palaszczuk. "We have got to minimise the risk. We are at a
pressure cooker moment at the moment. Right across Australia." Western
Australia and Victoria have also called for a reassessment of arrivals allowed
into the country. New South Wales recorded 22 new cases on Wednesday,
taking its cluster to about 170 cases. Its capital, Sydney, and surrounding
regions remain in lockdown until 9 July.
^ Clearly the once highly praised
Australian Covid Strict Response is no more. Australia not only tightly self-isolated
itself from the outside world, but also tightly self-isolated itself from
itself and yet all the self-isolation has helped lead to the lack of vaccines
and the spread of the Indian Variant. ^
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