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Australia commits to Covid suppression amid Omicron concerns

 Australia’s leaders have committed to the country’s coronavirus “suppression” strategy amid concerns over the Omicron variant.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison and state and territory leaders on Tuesday evening agreed to continue to pursue a strategy of suppression at a meeting of national cabinet.

Chief Medical Officer (CMO) Paul Kelly told the meeting that there was “insufficient evidence” that vaccines are less effective against Omicron and advised no immediate change to Australia’s border restrictions or quarantine requirements, Xinhua news agency reported.

“The variant, over the next few weeks, we’ll learn a lot more about it, and I think that will give us the confidence to keep moving forward because that’s what we want to do,” Morrison said in a press conference on Wednesday.

On Wednesday morning, Australia reported more than 1,300 new locally-acquired Covid cases, one of which has been confirmed to be infected with the Omicron Covid-19 variant, and six deaths, as the country continues to battle the third wave of infections.

The majority of new cases were in Victoria, the country’s second-most populous state with Melbourne as the capital city, where 1,179 cases were reported.

ALSO READ: Omicron scare- Revised testing rules leave passengers waiting for 6 hours at airports

The Northern Territory (NT) reported three new cases including two flight crew members who were in isolation and an infant from the Binjari community, which remains in a hard lockdown until next Tuesday.

Also in NT, three teenagers who scaled a fence to escape from the Howard Springs Covid quarantine facility near Darwin in the early hours of Wednesday morning have been arrested.

The teenagers aged 15, 16, and 17 were in quarantine after being deemed close contacts of positive cases.

NT Chief Minister Michael Gunner said that while the teenagers posed a low public health threat they would face consequences for their escape including restarting their quarantine time.

As of Tuesday, 92.5 percent of Australians aged 16 and over have received one vaccine dose and 87.2 percent have had their second dose, according to the Health Department.

 

 

 

 

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