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Australian virus cases to skyrocket when international travel resumes: PM

Australians have been warned to prepare for rising coronavirus case numbers of up to 1000 a week when international borders open.

Apr 16, 2021, updated Apr 16, 2021
Photo: supplied

Photo: supplied

The news comes as authorities investigate a potential link between the death of a 48-year-old woman in NSW who reportedly received a COVID vaccination before developing blood clots.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison asked people not to jump to conclusions about the woman’s death as state and federal agencies gather further information.

Australians under the age of 50 were last week warned off receiving the AstraZeneca COVID vaccine, after a link was confirmed between the jab and rare blood clots.

The warning added to delays in Australia’s vaccine rollout and made airlines’ preparation for an October restart for overseas travel look optimistic.

The Federal Government’s dumped timetable means Australia’s border is unlikely to reopen until 2022.

Morrison said Australians had become used to recording days of zero community transmission but that would need to change.

“If we were to lift the borders and people were to come, then you would see those cases increase,” he told 6PR radio.

“Australians would have to become used to dealing with a thousand cases a week or more.”

Morrison said states and territories would need to get on the same page about acceptable virus levels when travel restarts.

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Australian Medical Association president Omar Khorshid said vaccinations would be the country’s way out of the health crisis.

“We don’t have COVID now, but COVID is coming,” he told ABC radio.

“We cannot keep this virus out of Australia forever unless we become a true island nation with no travel.”

Morrison continues to defend the vaccine rollout, rejecting comparisons with less-developed nations at more advanced stages.

“There’s been a bit of a pile-on about the vaccine but the facts are people are getting vaccinated and we want to encourage people to get vaccinated,” he told 2GB radio.

While mass vaccination centres are likely to administer the Pfizer and Novavax jabs later in the year, the prime minister rejected using major hubs to give doses of AstraZeneca to over-50s.

“Herding elderly people into stadiums I don’t think is the right way to do things,” he said.

-AAP

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