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Australia reports 2,357 new COVID-19 cases as travel ban set to be lifted

An 18-month ban on international travel is set to be gradually lifted from next month for some states when 80 percent of people aged 16 and over are fully vaccinated.

Lidia Kelly and Stefica Nicol Bikes (Reuters)
Sydney, Australia
Sun, October 3, 2021

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Australia reports 2,357 new COVID-19 cases as travel ban set to be lifted A man walks past police offers patroling the streets of central business district of Sydney on July 31, 2021, as authorities warned against the anti-lockdown protest. (AFP/David Gray)

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ustralia reported 2,357 new cases of the Delta coronavirus variant on Saturday, as the push to vaccinate the country's population continues in order to end lockdowns and allow for the reopening of international borders.

An 18-month ban on international travel is set to be gradually lifted from next month for some states when 80 percent of people aged 16 and over are fully vaccinated.

Fifty-five percent of Australians were fully inoculated as of Friday, but nearly 80 percent have received at least one shot.

Victoria state, which reported a record 1,488 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday, on Friday ordered about 1 million employees across industries to receive at least one dose of a COVID vaccine by Oct. 15 to keep working.

Police in Melbourne, the state capital, on Saturday dispersed a small rally against the mandate and made several arrests for breaking public health rules that ban large public gatherings.

The state, with about a quarter of Australia's 25 million people, has been in a hard lockdown since Aug. 5.

New South Wales state, battling the country's biggest Delta outbreak, reported 813 cases and 10 deaths on Saturday. Nearly 88 percent of the state's eligible population have been partially vaccinated and 65 percent fully.

Sydney, the state capital, has been under lockdown since June 26, with some restrictions scheduled to be lifted on Oct. 11 and more later in the month.

Australia's most populous state is expected to be the first to fully open up once 80 percent vaccination is reached, but authorities have warned case numbers are expected to soar and hospitals will come under strain as Australia learns to live with COVID-19.

"I'm worried about how we are going to cope with it culturally," Kirsty Keating, an Australia citizen originally from Scotland who lives in Sydney, told Reuters about the country's reopening.

"Most of the people I know overseas have lived with COVID and we haven't, and I think it could put a pressure on our health system and make everybody very tense."

Saturday's other infections were reported in the Australian Capital Territory, Queensland and South Australia.

Australia closed its international borders in March 2020. Since then, only a limited number of people have been granted a permit to leave the country for critical business or humanitarian reasons.

Citizens and permanent residents abroad have been allowed to return, subject to quotas and a mandatory 14-day quarantine period in a hotel at their expense.

"I think it's great coming up to Christmas that people get to reunite with their families," Peter Hendriks, a priest in Sydney, told Reuters about the decision to reopen borders.

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