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Eight dead, 43 fight for life as Sydney lockdown may stretch into September

The NSW crisis cabinet will meet to map out a strategy to deal with the evolving COVID-19 crisis after a week that saw daily infections soar and an illegal violent street protest in Sydney with thousands of unmasked people defying lockdown restrictions.

Jul 26, 2021, updated Jul 26, 2021
Protesters march along Broadway and George St towards Sydney Town Hall during the ‘World Wide Rally For Freedom’ anti-lockdown rally at Hyde Park in Sydney, Saturday. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas)

Protesters march along Broadway and George St towards Sydney Town Hall during the ‘World Wide Rally For Freedom’ anti-lockdown rally at Hyde Park in Sydney, Saturday. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas)

The lockdown for Greater Sydney and four surrounding regions, now in its fifth week, is due to end on Friday but with the highly infectious Delta strain spiralling, there’s no reprieve in sight.

Premier Gladys Berejiklian deflected reports the lockdown was likely to extend until mid-September, saying nothing had been decided.

“I wouldn’t come to any conclusions like that,” she told Sydney radio 2GB on Monday.

“I don’t know where that story came from. It certainly wasn’t from me or anybody that’s in the know because we’re still working all that out.”

However, she flagged some restrictions would be necessary until the majority of the population was vaccinated.

“If there’s anything that we can ease we absolutely will,” she said.

“It is literally a day by day, week by week issue.”

However, she did confirm there will be a return of “some construction activity on Saturday”.

Victoria has reported 11 new local COVID-19 cases as Premier Daniel Andrews warns some restrictions are likely to remain even if the state’s lockdown lifts as planned.

The health department said all the new locally acquired cases had been linked to Victoria’s current Delta strain outbreaks and were in isolation for their entire infectious period.

Another case was recorded in hotel quarantine, with active infections across the state rising to 190.

More than 25,000 test results were received in the 24 hours to midnight on Monday, while almost 14,000 vaccine doses were administered at state-run sites during the same period.

The fate of three local government areas in regional NSW areas due to exit a lockdown on July 28 is also unclear.

The premier again expressed her distress about the weekend anti-lockdown protest, saying it had the potential to be a super-spreader event.

“We won’t know for about a week the extent to which that may have set us back,” in terms of infection numbers, she told Nine Network on Monday.

Meanwhile Australia’s youngest death from COVID-19 so far, a Brazilian student in her 30s without any pre-existing conditions, will be recorded in Monday’s health statistics.

Eight people have died during the latest outbreak, which erupted in Sydney on June 16.

There are 43 people in intensive care, none of whom were fully vaccinated, with 18 ventilated.

NSW recorded 141 new local virus cases in the 24 hours to 8pm on Saturday.

Frustration over the lockdown boiled over on Saturday when about 3,500 people marched through Sydney’s CBD to protest the lockdown.

Some 57 people have been charged and 90 infringement notices were issued. Two men have been charged with striking a police horse.

Senior Constable Patrick Condon was riding “Tobruk” and was in the centre of the violent protest when the horse was allegedly struck.

He said Tobruk was doing well and had been inundated with gifts of licorice and carrots and good wishes from the public.

“I patrolled out at Manly (on Sunday) and just got overwhelming support and people walking up offering their support,” he told Nine.

A new mass vaccination hub at Macquarie Fields, at the epicentre of the outbreak in Sydney’s southwest, is opening on Monday with the capacity to deliver 20,000 jabs a week.

The Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation says everyone 18 and over in Greater Sydney “should strongly consider getting vaccinated with any available vaccine including COVID-19 vaccine AstraZeneca”.

While Pfizer supplies remain limited, the NSW government says it has a lot of AstraZeneca vaccines.

In NSW, 15.4 per cent of eligible residents are fully vaccinated.

NSW Health is urging anyone in northern NSW to monitor for symptoms after a positive COVID-19 case travelled on a Virgin flight from Sydney to Ballina and then on to Queensland earlier in mid-July.

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