The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia to deploy troops to Melbourne to help stem outbreak

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MELBOURNE: Australia’s military announced yesterday it would send 1,000 troops to Melbourne in an effort to help contain the country’s only significan­t coronaviru­s outbreak over fears of a second wave.

Victoria state has seen a spike in Covid-19 cases, recording almost 150 new infections over the past week as new clusters have emerged in Melbourne.

Yesterday, authoritie­s recorded at least 37 cases — the highest national total since mid-April.

While the numbers remain small compared to global tallies, the outbreak has rattled Australia, which has been rolling back restrictio­ns after successful­ly curbing the virus spread.

Defence Minister Linda Reynolds said Thursday that 1,000 troops would be deployed to Victoria ‘in the coming days’.

Up to 850 Australian Defence Force personnel will help monitor returned internatio­nal travellers being held in hotel quarantine while about 200 others will provide logistical and medical support to Covid-19

This suburban testing blitz is all about finding all of those people that have this virus, then having them quarantine­d in their home with appropriat­e support.

Daniel Andrews

testing facilities, she added.

Military personnel are already manning the borders of states that are closed to outside visitors as well as providing planning support to health and emergency management services, including in Victoria.

However, the deployment of such a large military contingent to a major Australian city is unpreceden­ted in the coronaviru­s crisis.

It comes as concern ramps up in Melbourne, with additional popup testing centres set up in virus ‘hot spots’ and supermarke­ts reimposing buying limits amid fears of a return of panicbuyin­g.

Virus clusters have emerged in large family groups spread across the country’s second city, at a hotel used for quarantini­ng returned travellers and at a clothing store.

Victoria state Premier Daniel Andrews said 1,000 workers were going door-to-door urging residents in the worst-affected areas to get tested, with hopes of testing 100,000 people in 10 suburbs over 10 days.

“This suburban testing blitz is all about finding all of those people that have this virus, then having them quarantine­d in their home with appropriat­e support,” he told reporters.

“It’s about bringing further stability to these numbers. The numbers will grow, but that’s exactly the strategy: Find these cases.”

Australia has recorded roughly 7,500 cases of coronaviru­s and 104 deaths in a population of 25 million, with several regions believed to be effectivel­y virus free.

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