Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the day’s events. If you are just joining us now, here’s what you need to know:
- Children aged between 5 to 11 will not be able to be vaccinated against coronavirus before the end of the year, which has significant implications for jurisdictions with younger populations including remote communities in the Northern Territory.
- Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt said that Pfizer had submitted only its first application on COVID-19 vaccines for children to the Therapeutic Goods Administration. “The critical thing is a full and thorough assessment,” Mr Hunt told Sunrise. Mr Hunt also said Australia would not lock out international travellers who had had a second jab more than six months ago but had not received a booster shot. Some countries, such as Israel, are going down this path.
- Northern Territory Chief Minister Michael Gunner announced a new road map this evening for easing coronavirus restrictions in remote communities, which have a higher proportion of Indigenous Australians and younger people. The double-dose vaccination target in remote communities will be 80 per cent of people aged five and over, not 16 and over as is standard across the rest of the country. “Simple maths tells us that vaccinating 80 per cent of people 16 and over in a community where the median age is 25 won’t give you the same coverage or protection as a community where the median age is 40,” Mr Gunner said.
- The NT government extended a lockout in Greater Darwin until at least midnight on Tuesday but lifted a lockout in Katherine at 5pm. While the territory recorded no new coronavirus cases on Monday, authorities were concerned that a 21-year-old woman who arrived in the NT from Melbourne and infected two other locals might have infected others, including at a busy pub on Melbourne Cup day.