COVID-19

Virus curfew imposed on Australia’s 2nd biggest city Melbourne

Agence France-Presse

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Virus curfew imposed on Australia’s 2nd biggest city Melbourne

A cyclist passes a group of police and soldiers patrolling the Docklands area of Melbourne on August 2, 2020, after the announcement of new restrictions to curb the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus. - Australia on August 2 introduced sweeping new measures to control a growing coronavirus outbreak in its second-biggest city, including an overnight curfew and a ban on weddings for the first time during the pandemic. (Photo by William WEST / AFP)

AFP

'These are the decisions made because anything short of this will not keep us safe,' says the premier of Victoria state, of which Melbourne is the capital

Australia on Sunday, August 2, introduced sweeping new measures to control a growing coronavirus outbreak in its second biggest city, including an overnight curfew and a ban on weddings for the first time during the pandemic.

Despite a lockdown that began in early July, Melbourne has continued to report hundreds of new cases daily, and authorities said the city’s residents would now face a curfew from 8 pm to 5 am for the next 6 weeks.

Declaring a “state of disaster” on Sunday, Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews said the state capital would move to Stage 4 restrictions until September 13 given “unacceptably high” levels of community transmission.

Melbourne residents will be limited to an hour of exercise a day, no further than 5 kilometers (about 3 miles) from home starting Sunday night.

Only one person per household will be able to shop for essential items each day, also within the same strict radius.

Most school and university students in Melbourne will return to online learning from midnight Wednesday, just weeks after returning to their classrooms, while kindergartens and daycare centers will be effectively closed from Thursday.

Weddings will also be banned in the city. At the height of the first wave of the pandemic, weddings in Australia were limited to 5 people.

“These are the decisions made because anything short of this will not keep us safe,” Andrews said.

“Anything short of this will see it drag on for months and months and months.”

Additional restrictions affecting workplaces would be announced Monday, Andrews added, suggesting that non-essential businesses will face closures.

The state recorded 671 new COVID-19 cases and 7 deaths from the virus on Sunday.

Outside Melbourne, the rest of Victoria will move to a Stage 3 lockdown from midnight Wednesday with people allowed to leave home only for work, study, care and essential shopping.

Elsewhere in Australia, other states and territories have for weeks reported zero or a small number of cases while relaxing restrictions.

They have, however, banned visitors from Victoria and Sydney – another virus hotspot.

Australia’s total reported infections reached almost 18,000 on Sunday, with 208 deaths in a population of 25 million. – Rappler.com

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