SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia’s second largest city Melbourne will exit a COVID-19 hard lockdown as planned on Thursday night, Victoria state authorities said, although some restrictions on travel and gatherings would likely remain for another week.
After two weeks in a strict lockdown that forced people to remain home except for essential business, Melbourne’s five million residents will get more freedom to step outside from 11:59 p.m. local time (1359 GMT) on Thursday.
However, people must stay within 25 kms (15 miles) of their homes, officials said, in an effort to stop transmission during an upcoming long weekend. There will also be a total ban on house gatherings and masks will be mandatory indoors.
“This is a good day,” Victoria state Acting Premier James Merlino told reporters in Melbourne on Wednesday.
“But we know this isn’t over yet and until we have widespread vaccination across Victoria and the country, the virus will still be with us.”
Merlino said further easing of restrictions for Melbourne could happen within a week barring any spike in cases.
Australia has effectively reined in COVID-19, recording just over 30,200 cases and 910 deaths, due to speedy tracing systems, snap lockdowns and strict social distancing rules.
A 44-year-old woman tested positive in Queensland state, authorities said on Wednesday, after driving from Victoria, through New South Wales, earlier this month.
Authorities said there was no immediate evidence of community transmission and no new restrictions on residents have been issued.
Queensland’s state capital of Brisbane last went into a snap lockdown in late March to contain an outbreak that was quickly suppressed.
Victoria has endured four lockdowns since the pandemic begun, the longest more than 100 days late in last year, and the state has seen more than 800 deaths, 90% of the national toll.
On Wednesday, Victoria reported just one new locally acquired COVID-19 case, the lowest rise in more than two weeks, versus two a day earlier.
Daily cases have remained in single digits on most days of the lockdown and cases were all linked to the highly-infectious Delta virus variant found among cases late last week which raised concerns of a possible spike in infections.
(Reporting by Renju Jose and Jonathan Barrett; Editing by Michael Perry)