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All of Victoria will be plunged into a five-day stage-four lockdown from midnight amid fears the hyper-infectious UK strain of coronavirus is spreading rapidly around the state.
Residents will be confined to their homes except for essential reasons and schools and businesses will be closed.
Masks must be worn everywhere except in the home and private and public gatherings are banned.
It means fans cannot attend the Australian Open with Serena Williams, Novak Djokovic and Aussie superstar Nick Kyrgios due to play on Friday.
Premier Daniel Andrews said the deadly disease was ‘moving at a velocity that has not been seen anywhere in our country’ and said there will be more cases that have not been identified.
‘Because this is so infectious and is moving so fast, we need a circuit breaker,’ he said.
It is the first lockdown in Victoria since a four-month shutdown over the winter due a catastrophic failure of the state’s hotel quarantine system which led to 800 deaths and 20,000 cases.
Fresh concerns about the system have been raised after a worker at the Intercontinental on Collins Street was pictured walking through the hotel without a mask on Friday.
Premier Daniel Andrews is considering a city-wide shut down which would likely see fans banned from the Australian Open with Aussie superstar Nick Kyrgios (left) due to play at 7pm
Victoria is on the brink of a third lockdown. Pictured: Tennis fans enjoy Day four of the Australian Open, which would have crowds banned if lockdown occurred
A hotel quarantine worker without a mark at the Intercontinental on Collins Street in Melbourne. The picture was taken by a guest and sent to Nine News on Friday
Earlier on Friday, Scott Morrison backed a short, sharp lockdown of Melbourne over the weekend.
In a 3AW radio interview, the prime minister said a ‘proportionate’ response similar to the three-day lockdown in Brisbane last month is appropriate.
‘The short, sharp, proportionate response that we saw in a couple of other states dealing with similar challenges proved to be quite effective, particularly up there in Brisbane.
‘They got through that, they gave the contact tracers a head-start over the weekend and they were back at it.
‘I think that proportionate, targeted responses are the most effective way to deal with this,’ he added.
Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said she was monitoring the situation closely but did not close her border to Victorians.
The Northern Territory has declared Greater Melbourne a hotspot and imposed 14-day supervised quarantine for arrivals.
The ACT is urging federal MPs attending Parliament next week to fly from Melbourne on Friday to avoid getting locked out by any new border restrictions.
New South Wales is frantically contacting 7,000 people who entered from Victoria after visiting exposure sites to ask them to self-isolate for 14 days.
Victoria’s latest outbreak began on Monday when a hotel quarantine worker at the Holiday Inn at Melbourne Airport caught the virus from a returned traveller before more guests and workers caught the disease.
Scott Morrison (pictured in Melbourne on Thursday) has backed a short, sharp lockdown of Melbourne as a Covid-19 cluster grows to 13, with five new cases reported on Friday
Left: Tennis player Wang Qiang of China. Right: Tennis player Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic waits in line to receive a Covid-19 test
Two of the five new infections reported on Friday are husbands of waitresses at the hotel.
A close contact of a positive case worked at the Brunetti cafe at Melbourne Airport on Tuesday, sparking fears hundreds of travellers may have been exposed.
Meanwhile, coronavirus fragments have been detected in wastewater in Melbourne’s northern suburbs, leading to fears there may be a flood of new cases in the coming days.
The prime minister said he has not been briefed directly on the situation but Health Minister Greg Hunt is liaising with Victorian Health Minister Martin Foley.
For most of the pandemic, the prime minister has favoured a relaxed approach to restrictions that avoids city-wide lockdowns and border closures.
He was fiercely critical of Victoria’s four-month winter lockdown and described Mr Andrews’ plan to extend restrictions in September as ‘hard and crushing news for the people of Victoria.’
But his stance changed in January when he backed Brisbane’s three-day shut down after a hotel quarantine cleaner caught a highly infectious new strain of the virus.
Melbourne ‘s worrying Covid cluster has now climbed to 13 cases after five more positive tests linked to the Holiday Inn Melbourne Airport (pictured) were recorded
State government advisers were instructed to draw up plans for a potential lockdown as early as Friday evening – spelling an end to crowds at the Australian Open
He also supported a five-day lockdown of Perth earlier this month over a single case linked to hotel quarantine.
Sources say Mr Morrison has become more in favour of lockdowns because they are popular with voters who are scared of catching the virus and because state premiers will enforce them anyway.
Mr Andrews reportedly held crisis talks with health chiefs on Thursday night after five new infections were linked to the Holiday Inn Melbourne Airport cluster, bringing the outbreak to 13 cases.
State government advisers were instructed to draw up plans for a third lockdown as early as Friday evening which would spell an end to crowds at the Australian Open.
A source within Emergency Management Victoria fears they’ve ‘lost control’ of the outbreak, the Herald Sun reported.
The race to contain the cluster was described as ‘pandemonium’ by the source – and health authorities are said to believe they are losing.
The Victorian Department of Health and Human Services is reportedly working on the assumption that all of the cases are the ‘mutant’ UK super-strain which is about 70 per cent more contagious than the original form of Covid-19.
Cleaners wearing full PPE disinfect the Holiday Inn Hotel on February 10, 2021 at Holiday Inn Melbourne Airport
Pictured: Workers in full PPE disinfects the Holiday Inn Hotel Melbourne Airport
A source within Emergency Management Victoria fears they’ve ‘lost control’ of the outbreak. Pictured: A health worker carries out Covid testing in South Melbourne on February 5
There are deep concerns about the failure of the state’s contact tracers to join the dots between the confirmed cases, their close contacts, and the alarming results of the sewage testing.
Melbournians were under stay-at-home orders for 111 days consecutive days from July to November after the virus breached hotel quarantine.
The debacle that saw the virus breach the state’s hotel quarantine program last year was blamed on the inadequate virus control protocols by private security staff put in place by the Andrews government.
This time around the hotel quarantine breach is thought to be the result of an ‘exposure event’.
‘The working hypothesis is three cases are linked to an exposure event that involved a medical device called a nebuliser,’ Chief health officer Brett Sutton said on Wednesday.
‘It vaporises medication or liquid into a very fine mist.
If a stay-at-home order is given Mr Andrews it’s expected to mirror Perth’s recent five-day lockdown where residents are only permitted to outside the house for work, essential shopping, medical appointments and an hour of exercise within 5km radius
It will be a bitter pill to swallow for long-suffering Victorian residents who last year endured one of the world’s strictest lockdowns
The outbreak within the state’s hotel quarantine program will put Victorians on edge after residents last year endured 111 days under lockdown. Pictured: Residents line up for Covid testing in Melbourne
‘If that’s breathed in and someone is infectious or later tests positive then that picks up the virus and then that mist can be suspended in the air with very fine aerosolised particles.’
Up to 500 people have been deemed ‘close contacts’ of the 13 confirmed cases.
About 135 of them included quarantine workers at the Holiday Inn and returned travellers.
With the Australian Open in full swing, a lockdown would see the end of crowds at the multi-million-dollar Grand Slam – and could possibly create problems for staff and organisers working at Melbourne Park.
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