الثلاثاء, يونيو 16, 2026
  • Login
عاشق عُمان
  • أخبار
    • الطقس
    • Oman News
  • مقالات
  • وظائف وتدريب
  • ثقافة وأدب
    • شعر
    • خواطر
    • قصص وروايات
    • مجلس الخليلي للشعر
  • تلفزيون
    • بث أرضي للقناة الرياضية
  • لا للشائعات
  • المنتديات
No Result
View All Result
عاشق عُمان
No Result
View All Result




Home Oman News

Sydney readies for 'freedom day' after virus lockdown

7 أكتوبر، 2021
in Oman News
Sydney readies for 'freedom day' after virus lockdown

SYDNEY: Australia’s largest city will emerge from a 106-day lockdown on Monday, as Sydney authorities confirmed coronavirus vaccination targets had been met.

Stay-at-home orders will be lifted for the Harbour City’s five-million-plus people now that 70 percent of state residents over 16 have been double jabbed.

“The light at the end of the tunnel is now very, very close,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Thursday, hailing the reopening announcement.

From Monday, pubs, restaurants and shops will throw open their shutters and welcome back the fully vaccinated.

Five-kilometre travel restrictions will also be lifted, although state and international borders will remain closed for now.

The reopening — described by many as “freedom day” — is both “exciting” and “nerve-racking” according to Alyce Murphy, general manager of The Carrington, a Sydney pub now hustling to get staff and deliveries back on site.

“Obviously going from doing nothing for months, and then the prospect of having a few weeks to get the venue there was a little bit daunting,” she said.

Murphy tried to fill the almost four-month lockdown with activities such as painting and gardening. But like millions of Australians, she “also just sat on the couch and watched TV a lot”.

Australia has been spared the worst of the pandemic — recording 1,379 deaths in a population of around 26 million.

But for the last 18 months, under-vaccinated Australian cities have endured several gruelling lockdowns to limit the spread of the virus.

Jobs have been lost, kids have missed being at school for a large portion of the academic year, and restrictions have sparked a string of mostly small but noisy protests and a flood of online misinformation.

There is growing evidence that locked-down Australians have been drinking more and existing mental conditions have worsened, according to a recent report by the country’s Mental Health Think Tank.

In recent months, Australia’s repeated imposition of restrictions and efforts — now abandoned — to reach “Covid Zero” have brought it international attention.

The conservative-run country has become an unlikely lightning rod for the American right keen to vent against vaccine mandates and lockdowns everywhere.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis — whose state has recorded 55,000-plus deaths in a population slightly smaller than Australia — even suggested breaking off diplomatic relations.

“It’s not a free country at all,” he said. “Is Australia freer than communist China right now? I don’t know.”

Thousands of Australian residents have also chafed at the restrictions, and some have voted with their feet.

The country’s population has shrunk for the first time since World War I, as expatriates returned home in droves.

That has hit the hospitality and retail sectors which report staff shortages and logistics bottlenecks at warehouses that could make reopening difficult.

Some medical experts are also concerned that New South Wales state, of which Sydney is the capital, may be reopening too soon.

The government’s own health advice from the Doherty Institute recommended widespread reopening when vaccination rates reached 80 percent rather than the current 70 percent.

The Australian Medical Association warned Thursday that infections will rise with reopening and underfunded hospitals risk being overwhelmed.

“New South Wales must not be reckless at this critical time,” the group’s president Omar Khorshid said.

“That would cost more lives, cause more suffering, and put the economies of New South Wales and the nation at risk.”

But recently installed state premier Dominic Perrottet was adamant about the reopening.

On Thursday, he brought forward the date for most schools to resume and said masks would not be needed in offices.

Both measures are designed to get people back to work. — AFP

Share196Tweet123
Previous Post

Cash drops planned to bypass Taliban and help Afghans

Next Post

Two teachers shot dead in Kashmir

أحدث المنشورات

الطيران العُماني يحصد مجددًا جائزة “المقاعد الأكثر راحة في الشرق الأوسط”

Oman Air Once Again Recognised as the Middle East’s Leader in Seat Comfort

14 يونيو، 2026
Bank Muscat Introduces Special Competitive Rates on Instant Personal Loan via Mobile App

Bank Muscat Introduces Special Competitive Rates on Instant Personal Loan via Mobile App

14 يونيو، 2026
تتويج بنك مسقط بجائزة أفضل علامة تجارية في تجربة الزبائن المخصصة للشركات

Bank Muscat Named Best Brand in Customer Experience in Corporate Banking Category

11 يونيو، 2026
الشركة العُمانية للنطاق العريض ووزارة التعليم توقّعان برنامج تعاون لدعم مبادرة “التاجر الصغير” وتعزيز ريادة الأعمال الطلابية

Oman Broadband Company and the Ministry of Education Sign a Cooperation Program to Support the “Al Tajer Al Sagheer” Initiative and Promote Student Entrepreneurship

2 يونيو، 2026
بنك مسقط يواصل الاستثمار في الكفاءات الوطنية عبر إطلاق نسخة جديدة من برنامج “نسور”

Bank Muscat Continues Investing in National Talent with the Launch of New Edition of EAGLEs Programme for Branch Managers

2 يونيو، 2026
احصل على بطاقة الجوهر البلاتينية الائتمانية من بنك مسقط مجاناً

Get Your Al Jawhar Platinum Credit Card from Bank Muscat Free of Charge

1 يونيو، 2026
Next Post
Two teachers shot dead in Kashmir

Two teachers shot dead in Kashmir

اترك تعليقاً

لن يتم نشر عنوان بريدك الإلكتروني. الحقول الإلزامية مشار إليها بـ *

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Whatsapp : +96899060010

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • أخبار
    • الطقس
    • Oman News
  • مقالات
  • وظائف وتدريب
  • ثقافة وأدب
    • شعر
    • خواطر
    • قصص وروايات
    • مجلس الخليلي للشعر
  • تلفزيون
    • بث أرضي للقناة الرياضية
  • لا للشائعات
  • المنتديات

Copyright © 2024