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‘Ready for takeoff’: PM details how Aussies can return to the world

The Morrison government has announced plans on how and when fully vaccinated Australians can resume international travel, with a key requirement for home quarantine on their return.

Oct 01, 2021, updated Oct 01, 2021
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. (AAP Image/Lukas Coch)

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. (AAP Image/Lukas Coch)

The tough border measures preventing people from leaving Australia without approval will finally be scrapped when 80 per cent double-dose vaccination coverage for people aged 16 and over is reached.

A shift from hotels to home quarantine will be the trigger for a major overhaul of international travel, with the new system expected to start in November.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the time had come to give Australians back their lives.

“I want us to get moving. I want people to be able to come home,” he told reporters in Canberra.

“I want that incentive to be there that says ‘let’s get vaccinated, let’s open up’.”

Fully immunised Australians will be allowed to quarantine in homes for a week provided they have received approved vaccines.

That will include AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson, along with China’s Sinovac and Covishield produced in India.

Unvaccinated people or those without approved jabs will require two weeks’ managed isolation in hotels or dedicated facilities.

People who cannot be immunised including those under 12 or with a medical condition will be treated as vaccinated.

States and territories will access the new freedoms at different times with vaccination coverage and home quarantine programs varying across jurisdictions.

NSW is expected to be first cab off the rank with that state’s government keen to welcome home some of the 45,000 Australians stranded abroad.

In coming weeks, Australians will be able to access internationally proof of vaccination certificates which include a QR code.

The federal government will offer to facilitate flights into any state or territory that agrees to start seven-day home quarantine trials for returning Australians.

“It’s time to give Australians their lives back,” Morrison said.

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“We’ve saved lives. We’ve saved livelihoods, but we must work together to ensure that Australians can reclaim the lives that they once had in this country.”

Testing is expected to remain a requirement of international travel with rapid antigen checks likely to form part of the regime.

The government is also working towards quarantine-free travel with countries like New Zealand when health advice deems it safe.

The prime minister didn’t rule out further cutting the isolation period for fully vaccinated people in the future.

“We’ll see how that goes and I think there’ll be opportunity to reduce that,” he said.

“Next year we’ll be in a very different place again.”

Morrison said recognising Sinovac and Covishield would be important in allowing Australians and international students in from countries where the vaccines were used.

“India is an obvious one of those, as is China and other countries throughout southeast Asia.”

More than 55 per cent of Australians over 16 have been fully vaccinated, while 78.5 per cent have received at least one dose.

 

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