Vaccinated Australians’ Travel Ease Trial To Start In 6 Weeks

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  • Pilot program for immunised people to leave and return under relaxed restrictions could begin soon, Greg Hunt tells colleagues.
  • The federal government is facing increasing pressure to provide incentives for Australians to get vaccinated and to ease the travel ban that has separated families.
According to an article published in The Guardian, Australians who have been vaccinated against Covid would be able to leave the country and return with less strict quarantine requirements under a plan that could be trialled within six weeks.

Federal Health Minister’s Proposal

The federal health minister, Greg Hunt, revealed the proposal in the Coalition party room on Tuesday following a question from Liberal MP Jason Falinski, who had asked whether vaccination could see people exempted from outbound and inbound travel restrictions.

Closed Borders

Australia shut its borders in March 2020 in response to the coronavirus pandemic imposing two weeks hotel quarantine on those arriving into the country.

Outbound travel is also banned – which was upheld by the full federal court on Tuesday – although more than 140,000 Australian citizens and residents have travelled overseas for critical business, on compassionate grounds or for other exempted reasons.

Jab’s Freebies

With Australia struggling to vaccinate its population by the end of 2021, there is pressure on the federal government to provide incentives to get the jab and to ease the travel ban that has separated families.

Travel easing Program

About 40,000 Australians remain stranded overseas due to flight caps imposed as a result of limited hotel quarantine beds.

Hunt told the Coalition party room that two weeks ago the government had set up a taskforce to examine how vaccination could interact with Australia’s travel rules.

Modelling began on Monday and a pilot program could begin in six to eight weeks’ time, the health minister said.

Travel to Green Zone

Exemptions would be extended to people vaccinated in Australia or in countries where vaccination status can be reliably verified – such as the UK, US, Canada and Singapore.

Australians are already able to travel to New Zealand and back without going into hotel quarantine. It’s the only country currently categorised as a “green zone” via the trans-Tasman travel bubble.

Rules Considerations

Exemptions would be extended to people vaccinated in Australia or in countries where vaccination status can be reliably verified – such as the UK, US, Canada and Singapore.

Australians are already able to travel to New Zealand and back without going into hotel quarantine. It’s the only country currently categorised as a “green zone” via the trans-Tasman travel bubble.

Spokesperson’s Statement

A spokesman for Hunt told Guardian Australia “the minister had previously stated on a number of occasions that vaccination may bring forward the capacity of vaccinated people to travel”.

“Today’s advice [to the party room] was consistent with that,” he said. “No advice has been received.”

Innovative Alternatives Development

In October, the prime minister, Scott Morrison, asked experts to develop “innovative” alternatives to hotel quarantine, including quarantine in-home, on-farm or on-campus, but the options were rejected in November on the basis they were not considered safe.

In January, Jane Halton, who conducted a national review into the system in October, told Guardian Australia hotel quarantine would be needed “until we have a significant proportion of our population vaccinated”.

Views after Complete Vaccination

But once vulnerable populations had been vaccinated in Australia “the conversation will change [and] there will come a point we ask ourselves: do we continue to close ourselves off to rest of world?” she said at the time.

Halton made the comments in response to a call from Liberal MP Andrew Laming to allow home isolation, halved timeframes for quarantine, or quarantine in resort facilities.

Prime Minister’s Plans

In May, Morrison proposed that Australians who had been vaccinated could be exempted from domestic restrictions, such as border bans and lockdowns imposed by the states in response to outbreaks.

The plan met resistance from states such as Queensland and Victoria that wanted to preserve their ability to set restrictions, and from members of the government such as George Christensen who objected on the basis it rendered unvaccinated people second-class citizens.

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Source : The Guardian