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Australia on alert as first Omicron community case confirmed

Australia on alert as first Omicron community case confirmed

November 30, 2021 | 10:32 AM
Travellers arrive at the international terminal at Sydney Airport, as countries react to the new coronavirus Omicron variant amid the coronavirus disease pandemic, in Sydney, Australia, November 30. REUTERS
Australian authorities on Tuesday confirmed a person with Covid-19 had the new Omicron variant after disclosing that the person had been active in the community, but urged calm as they weighed up the severity of the strain.The fully vaccinated person visited a busy shopping centre in Sydney while likely infectious, officials said. All passengers in the person's flight were asked to self-isolate for 14 days regardless of their vaccination status.The additional case brings Australia's total number of infections with the new variant to six. But it is the first case where the person appeared to be active in the community. All other cases have been in quarantine and are asymptomatic or display very mild symptoms.Authorities also said urgent genomic tests have begun to determine whether two other positive cases on the same flight were infected with the Omicron variant.The report about the new community case came as Australia's emergency cabinet - a group of federal and state leaders - met to review measures aimed at limiting the spread of the variant.The country already delayed the reopening https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/australias-reopening-plans-doubt-after-omicron-cases-2021-11-28 of its international borders by two weeks, less than 36 hours before international students and skilled migrants were to be allowed to re-enter the country.New South Wales, home to a third of Australia's 25 million population, increased fines for overseas arrivals who didn't comply with a mandatory 72-hour self-isolation, to A$5,000 ($3,561) from A$1,000 for individuals and to A$10,000 from A$5,000 for corporations.The state, which recently emerged from four months of lockdown, has been unwinding its system of mandatory hotel quarantine but has said arrivals from several southern African countries must still spend 14 days in quarantine.But the federal government urged state leaders to go ahead with plans to relax domestic border restrictions, which have been in place sporadically since the start of the pandemic, by Christmas."We need to make calm decisions. Don't get spooked by this," Prime Minister Scott Morrison told a news conference in Canberra.Health Minister Greg Hunt said the overwhelming view of medical experts was that "while it's an emerging variant, ittarget="_blank"'>
November 30, 2021 | 10:32 AM