Vaccinated Australian permanent residents and citizens will
be free to travel through Sydney from Nov. 1 without the need for hotel
quarantine on their return.
Two weeks ago, Morrison said Australians, skilled migrants
and students would be given priority over foreign travelers in coming to
Sydney. He predicted tourists would return in 2022 or later.
But while tourists would retain their low priority, Morrison
now expects they will return this year.
“That is very possible and very achievable before the end of
the year,” Morrison said.
Sydney-based Qantas announced services to Thailand,
Singapore, South Africa and Fiji had been brought forward by weeks or months. A
new service to New Delhi would begin in December, the first to India in almost
a decade.
The New South Wales state government’s decision to dispense
with quarantine requirements for vaccinated travelers in Sydney had
significantly increased travel demand, a Qantas statement said.
The 22,000 staff employed by Qantas and its budget
subsidiary Jetstar would return to work in December, six months earlier than
planned.
The changes are being driven by New South Wales’ rapid
uptake of vaccines. By Friday, 83% of the population aged 16 and older was
fully vaccinated and almost 93% had at least one dose of a vaccine.
Only the national capital Canberra has a higher proportion
of the population vaccinated.
Australia had one the lowest vaccination rates of any
wealthy country due to supply problems and public distrust of locally
manufactured AstraZeneca. It now has one of the highest due in part to supply
deals done with Britain, Poland and Singapore.
Melbourne, Australia’s most populous city after Sydney, came
out of 77 days of lockdown on Friday after Victoria state reached a benchmark
of 70% of the target population fully vaccinated.
Pandemic restrictions were eased despite Victoria recording
its deadliest day of the delta variant outbreak with 16 COVID-19 deaths. There
were also 2,189 new infections detected in the latest 24 hours.
“Victorians, it’s fair to say, have done a quite amazing
thing. So many people going and getting vaccinated so quickly,” Victoria
Premier Daniel Andrews said.
“We’ve always said that lockdowns were a function of not
having the vaccine that we needed but if we got vaccinated, we’d have so many
more options,” he added.
Sydney, where the delta outbreak began in June, came out of
lockdown last week after reaching the same 70% vaccination benchmark.
New South Wales reported five COVID-19 deaths on Friday and
345 new infections. -AP
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