New Zealand suffers first Covid-19 infection for two months: Case of South African variant prompts Australia to suspend travel-bubble
- S.A. mutant strain found in 56-year-old woman who had returned from Europe
- She tested positive after her mandatory ten day quarantine had ended
- Australia has suspended its travel-bubble with New Zealand for 72 hours
- It is first case since mid-November as country operates tight border controls
New Zealand has suffered its first coronavirus case for more than two months, sparking a travel ban with Australia.
The more contagious South African mutant strain was discovered in a 56-year-old woman who had flown back from London after visiting Spain and the Netherlands.
She tested positive ten days after her mandatory 14-day quarantine ended.
New Zealand hasn’t had a covid case since mid-November because it has a zero covid strategy of strict border controls. It has recorded just 25 coronavirus deaths.
Australia shutdown the country’s travel-bubble with New Zealand for at least 72 hours while further contact-tracing is carried out.
COVID-19 Minister Chris Hipkins (pictured left with Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern) praised the woman for scrupulously keeping track of her movements
Security patrol outside the Pullman Hotel in Auckland, New Zealand, earlier this year. The woman had been staying at the hotel for 14 days and tested positive after leaving
Rock band SIX60 perform in front of 22,000 fans at the Hawkes Bay A&P Showgrounds on Saturday in Hastings, New Zealand
More than 20,000 fans rocked out with SIX60 on Saturday as New Zelanders enjoy normality after eradicating covid
Fans are packed into the concert venue without any fears over social-distancing
‘The strain of infection is the South African variant and the source of infection is highly likely to be a fellow returnee,’ said Health Minister Chris Hipkins.
Australian Health Minister Greg Hunt said it was a case of ‘significant concern’ and the increased possibility of transmission had prompted his government to suspend its ‘travel bubble’ with New Zealand for a minimum of 72 hours.
‘This will be done out of an abundance of caution whilst more is learnt about the event and the case,’ he told reporters in Canberra.
‘The changes come into effect immediately.’
Hunt urged New Zealanders with a flight to Australia scheduled within the next three days to ‘reconsider their need to travel’ as they will have to go into hotel quarantine – like other international arrivals – for up to 14 days on arrival.
The woman is thought to have been infected during quarantine by a person on the same floor of the hotel who tested positive two days before the woman left.
The 56-year-old travelled around the Northland region near Auckland after her release from quarantine and showed symptoms for several days before being tested.
Two people close to her, including her husband, have since returned negative tests and New Zealand’s director-general of health Ashley Bloomfield said they likely avoided contracting the illness due to the type of infection.
‘She didn’t talk about respiratory symptoms, it was more muscle aches, so she may not have been sharing or spreading the virus much,’ he said.
‘I don’t think that’s peculiar to this variant, it’s just how it was expressed in this woman.’
The World Health Organization has said there is no clear evidence the South African variant leads to more severe disease or a higher death rate.
People wait in line outside a pop up Covid-19 testing station in Auckland in November
New Zeland’s Health Minister Hipkins said: ‘This woman concerned has been scrupulous in keeping a good record of her movements, scanning the QR codes wherever she has gone.
‘That’s laid a very good foundation for our contact tracing team … I want to acknowledge that.’
Health authorities have also ordered further testing at the woman’s isolation hotel, the Auckland-based Pullman Hotel.
While the case is the first in the community for three months, New Zealand has continued to pick up cases within the border regime, including the British mutant strain.
The country’s total number of confirmed cases is 1927, with 25 deaths recorded since the disease arrived on Kiwi soil in February last year.