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As it happened: Victoria records one new case on state’s first day of lockdown as Holiday Inn cluster grows; 2021 Australian Open to proceed with no crowds

Hanna Mills Turbet, Mathew Dunckley and Ashleigh McMillan
Updated ,first published

Summary

  • Seven new locations across Melbourne have been added to a growing list of high-risk exposure sites linked to the Holiday Inn cluster as Victorians begin their first day of a snap five-day lockdown.
  • Sydney residents returning from Melbourne will be forced into a five-day lockdown after Victorian health officials privately conceded that contact tracers took too long to get in touch with people exposed in Melbourne’s new coronavirus outbreak.
  • A returned traveller blamed for spreading coronavirus through the Holiday Inn quarantine hotel by using a nebuliser says he was twice given permission from Victorian health authorities to use the medical device while in quarantine.
  • Victoria’s bid to cut weekly hotel quarantine arrivals from thousands to just hundreds has set up a clash with the Morrison government, which believes the system can cope with the threat from new strains of the coronavirus without dropping numbers.

That’s all for today

By Ashleigh McMillan

Follow Sunday’s live coronavirus coverage here: Tennis player tests positive after leaving Australia; Holiday Inn cluster row escalates

  • Greek tennis player Michail Pervolarakis says he has tested positive for coronavirus upon arrival in South Africa, after flying there from Australia. A Tennis Australia spokeswoman said he flew out of Melbourne to an unknown location on February 9 and returned a negative test on that day.
  • The Victorian government has stuck by its claim a returned traveller since hospitalised with coronavirus didn’t declare a nebuliser, blamed for the hotel quarantine super spreading event that has locked down the state.
  • The 38-year-old return traveller in Victoria insisted hotel quarantine staff were aware that he had the device and that they had even offered to source more of the medication administered by the machine.
  • Victoria recorded just one new coronavirus infection on Saturday, a man in his 30s who is a friend of a Holiday Inn staff member who had previously tested positive.

Tennis player tests positive on arrival to South Africa after leaving Australia

By Anthony Colangelo

Greek tennis player Michail Pervolarakis says he has tested positive for coronavirus upon arrival in South Africa, after flying there from Australia.

Pervolarakis - who did not play in the Australian Open but did play in the ATP Cup as late as February 5 – posted to his Instagram story at 9pm to let his followers know of the news.

Michail Pervolarakis of Greece greets fans during day four of the 2021 ATP Cup on February 5 in Melbourne.Getty

The ATP Cup was held at Melbourne Park. His movements since are unknown.

“Hi everyone. After a 24 hour+ travel day from Australia to South Africa I have been diagnosed positive to COVID-19,” he wrote on Instagram.

Biden rules out COVID-19 tests for all domestic air passengers

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WASHINGTON - United States President Joe Biden has ruled out requiring coronavirus tests for all passengers on domestic flights, saying the scientific evidence doesn’t support implementing the measure.

A White House statement late on Friday local time (Saturday afternoon AEDT) said the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) isn’t recommending testing and that Biden will follow their lead.

US President Joe Biden on Thursday. AP

“President Biden has taken a number of steps to make travel safer since coming into office, including requiring masking on all air travel and public transit, pre-departure testing for inbound international travel and self-quarantine and testing after international travel,” White House spokesman Kevin Munoz said in a statement.

“At this time, CDC is not recommending required point of departure testing for domestic travel. As always, we will follow the science to bring this pandemic to an end.”

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Victoria’s regional towns go from swarming to silent

By Ashleigh McMillan

Images are starting to flood in of just how quiet regional Victoria is right now, with holiday spot Nagambie in the state’s north completely empty.

On a normal summer evening in Nagambie, around 130km north of Melbourne, you’d expect to see busy streets and boats studding the lake.

Nagambie’s empty main street on day one of Victoria’s snap lockdown on Saturday. The Age

But instead there’s few out and about tonight, due to the lockdown rules which require Victorians to only travel for four reasons, including essential shopping, care and caregiving, exercise and essential work.

And in Echuca on the Murray River, the outlook was not much different, according to my brother who lives there.

Food, flowers, festivities into the bin in multimillion-dollar lockdown catastrophe

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Victorian hospitality businesses set for one of the best weekends of the year are instead throwing away tens of millions of dollars worth of produce in a lockdown catastrophe, according to reporter Zach Hope.

Florists too were left scrambling on Friday and on Valentine’s Day eve to switch to a “click and collect” setting and get deliveries out the door amid uncertainty about whether they were even allowed to trade at all under current stage four COVID-19 restrictions.

North Carlton florist Rahnee Moller called in friends to help rush out Valentine’s Day orders before lockdown.Jason South

Florist Rahnee Moller, from Carlton North’s Art Stems on Lygon, was on Saturday sitting on thousands of dollars worth of perishable stock and unsure how much would have to be thrown away.

“[On Friday] people came in just to buy from us because they knew we had so much stock for Valentine’s Day,” Ms Moller said.

Hundreds of Melbourne property sales move online with buyers

By Rachel Wells

Melbourne’s property market has shrugged off the challenge of a temporary ban on in-person auctions, with a strong clearance rate and a $10 million-plus sale price under the virtual hammer.

In scenes far removed from the near-complete halt in activity last year during lockdowns, agents reported keen buyer interest in online auctions – and some even brought forward auctions to Friday night to beat the five-day ban because of the snap lockdown.

Melbourne agents have reported keen buyer interest in online auctions this week – with some brought forward to Friday night to beat the city’s five-day lockdown.

Saturday’s clearance rate was 75.4 per cent. There were 698 auctions scheduled – agents reported results from 439 results, 180 of which sold prior, and 92 were withdrawn. Twelve of 17 auctions brought forward to Friday sold in-person.

The highest sale price of the weekend was $10.15 million for a five-bedroom spread in Park Street, Brighton, on 1234 square metres.

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All 1500 Melbourne airport travellers in Queensland told to quarantine by authorities

By Matt Dennien

Queensland health authorities have managed to contact all 1500 people identified as having a connection to exposure sites at Melbourne airport before travelling into the state, acting chief health officer Sonya Bennett says.

All have now been asked to quarantine at their place of residence for 14 days from when they were last in greater Melbourne, which was declared a hotspot by Dr Bennett as of 1am Saturday.

Extra contact tracers were brought in to help with the task in the wake of the Holiday Inn quarantine hotel cluster which has now sent all of Victoria into a five-day lockdown.

“The fact that we have been able to move so quickly to contact these 1500 people means we are in a very positive position to control any potential spread into our community from our country’s latest outbreak,” Dr Bennett said in a statement on Saturday afternoon.

“The situation in Melbourne is yet another wake-up call for our community, that anything can change at any given moment during a pandemic.”

Dr Bennett said the border closure to travellers from greater Melbourne would be reviewed after 14 days instead of the usual 28 days because there was not yet wider community transmission associated with the cluster.

More than 300 contacts at exposure sites

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The daily Department of Health update has arrived.

There’s not a lot of news in it that we didn’t hear at the press conference this morning but it does provide a breakdown of the 996 people who have been identified as primary close contacts related to the Holiday Inn outbreak.

Of the 996 primary close contacts:

  • 78 are social and household contacts;
  • 614 are staff and resident of the Holiday Inn hotel quarantine facility; and
  • 304 are related to exposure sites.

“This number will increase daily as we continue to obtain contacts through interviews, QR codes, sign-in sheets and people coming forward,” the statement says.

Empty streets of Melbourne

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Melbourne is a city deserted at the moment as lockdown kicks in.

Talented The Age photographer Jason South has taken these shots today which really bring home the impact of the shutdown.

Looking towards the skyline from Docklands.Jason South
Empty Melbourne streets looking towards the city from Carlton North.Jason South
Deserted Bourke Street.Jason South
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CQV ‘sorry’ for nebuliser patient’s treatment

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Asked if there should be an apology to the man, Ms Cassar expressed regret over the situation.

“I’m deeply sorry for his treatment. No one ever wanted this to happen and I’m sorry that this has been played out the way it has, it is awful,” she said.

“We have never accused him of doing the wrong thing he hasn’t done the wrong thing. And he had no, I suspect, and he had no understanding.

“I’m sorry for the way he’s been treated and I would really encourage media outlets to be respectful to be kind. We need to be cognisant of the fact that this person has endured a really rough illness, and he’s trying to recover. We want to support him as best we can.”

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