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Australia borders could be shut until late 2022 - minister

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Australia has recorded 29 886 cases since the pandemic began, with a large proportion detected in hotel quarantine.
Australia has recorded 29 886 cases since the pandemic began, with a large proportion detected in hotel quarantine.
  • Australia is likely to remain shut to visitors until late 2022, as another global coronavirus surge smashed hopes of a quick reopening.
  • The prospect of the country being closed for almost three years will come as a hammer blow to the US$40-billion-a-year tourism industry.
  • Australia has recorded 29 886 cases since the pandemic began, with a large proportion detected in hotel quarantine.


Australia is likely to remain shut to visitors until late 2022, the country's trade and tourism minister said Friday, as another global coronavirus surge smashed hopes of a quick reopening.

Minister Dan Tehan said a wave of cases on the Indian sub-continent showed Australia's near blanket ban on arrivals was still essential to keep the country Covid-19-free.

Since March 20, 2020, Australians have been barred from travelling overseas and a hard-to-get individual exemption is needed for foreign visitors to enter the country.

It is "very hard to determine" when borders could reopen, Tehan told Sky News, "the best guess would be in the middle to the second half of next year".

Before the pandemic, around one million short-term visitors entered the country each month. That figure is now around 7 000.

Anyone who does enter must undergo 14 days strict hotel quarantine.

A recently established travel bubble with New Zealand has had mixed success, being paused for cities where the virus jumped from quarantine facilities before being contained.

Australia has recorded 29 886 cases since the pandemic began. A large proportion were detected in hotel quarantine.

Vaccination rollout has been slow, with just 2.5 million vaccines administered in a country of 25 million people, each needing two doses.

The prospect of the country being closed for almost three years will come as a hammer blow to the US$40-billion-a-year tourism industry.

"The hope would be that we might be able to see a few more bubbles set up and we'd be able to see more travel undertaken, but we're in a pandemic," he said.

"It's going to very much depend on how we are able to deal with the global pandemic."

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