Health and Science

Lockdown measures extended in Australia as officials try to contain outbreak of delta variant

Key Points
  • Australian officials extended lockdown and social distancing measures to more of the country on Wednesday, with four major cities already under a hard lockdown to contain an outbreak of the Delta variant.
  • Around one in two Australians are under stay-at-home orders, with millions others subjected to movement curbs and mandatory mask-wearing.
  • With more than five million residents of greater Sydney under a two-week lockdown, New South Wales state reported 22 new locally transmitted cases on Wednesday.
A person exercises at the Sydney Opera House during a foggy start to the day on June 30, 2021 in Sydney Australia. Lockdown restrictions continue as NSW health authorities work to contain a growing Covid-19 cluster.
Brook Mitchell | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Australian officials extended lockdown and social distancing measures to more of the country on Wednesday, with four major cities already under a hard lockdown in a race to contain an outbreak of the highly contagious Delta coronavirus variant.

Around one in two Australians are under stay-at-home orders, with millions of others subjected to movement curbs and mandatory mask-wearing amid Covid-19 flare-ups in several locations.

With more than five million residents of greater Sydney under a two-week lockdown until July 9, New South Wales state reported 22 new locally transmitted Covid-19 cases on Wednesday, all linked to prior infections.

That was up slightly from the previous two days, but still below the peak of the current outbreak of 30 new cases reported on Sunday.

"New South Wales is demonstrating a steady rate of cases at this stage ...but to date our fears about huge escalation haven't materialized and we certainly want to keep it that way," state Premier Gladys Berejiklian told reporters in Sydney.

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With a total of around 170 new locally transmitted cases since the first infection was detected two weeks ago in a limousine driver who transported overseas airline crew, NSW is the worst-affected state or territory in the current outbreak.

Residents of Sydney, Perth, Brisbane and Darwin were joined in lockdown on Wednesday by those of the outback town of Alice Springs, the gateway to UNESCO World Heritage-listed Uluru. Officials issued stay-at-home orders for the town after a potentially infected traveler used the airport.

South Australia, meanwhile, reported its first locally transmitted cases for 2021, but stopped short of imposing a full lockdown, saying they believed the threat was contained.

Officials instead limited home gathering and urged people to wear masks in public after they reported five new cases - a miner who had returned home from a Northern Territory mine and his wife and children who had been in self-isolation.

Elsewhere in the country, Queensland reported three new locally acquired cases, Western Australia logged one and the Northern Territory recorded none.

Singapore on Wednesday said travelers from Australia will have to undergo home quarantine for a week from Friday.

Vaccine woes

Lockdowns, tough social distancing, swift contact tracing and a high community compliance have helped Australia quash prior outbreaks and keep its Covid-19 numbers relatively low. It has reported just over 30,550 cases and 910 deaths since the pandemic began.

But less than 5% of its 20 million adult population has been fully vaccinated, leading to criticism of a sluggish national inoculation drive.

Ampoules of the Corona vaccine of the Swedish-British manufacturer AstraZeneca stand on a table in a GP practice.
Nicolas Armer | picture alliance | Getty Images

The federal government on Monday announced it would indemnify doctors who administer AstraZeneca's vaccine shots to people under 60, after previously preferencing Pfizer doses for that age group due to blood clot concerns.

Two deaths have been linked to the AstraZeneca vaccine, a 52-year-old woman and a 48-year-old woman.

However, Queensland state authorities said they would not endorse the move, saying it would unnecessarily put their younger population at risk.

"I don't want an 18-year-old in Queensland dying from a clotting illness who, if they got Covid probably wouldn't die," Queensland state Chief Health