Scott Morrison says international travel WON’T restart until medical experts give the green light

Scott Morrison reveals what it will take for international travel to restart – and says he’ll stick to the ‘Australian path’ of aggressive virus suppression – after flying to G7 summit

  • Scott Morrison said his government will continue aim of suppressing Covid-19 
  • Australia’s suppression strategy has kept the international borders closed 
  • Mr Morrison he hasn’t set a goal on vaccination numbers needed to restart travel
  • He said this would only occur ‘when the medical advice suggests we should’ 

Scott Morrison says his government will continue to traverse the ‘Australian path’ of aggressive Covid-19 suppression, emphasising there’ll be no international travel until medical experts say so.

The prime minister is attending the G7 summit in Cornwall in the UK as an observer and told reporters on Sunday that Australia wouldn’t change its virus approach.

He said his government hadn’t set a target on the number of Australians who need to be vaccinated before international travel resumes. He said this would only occur ‘when the medical advice suggests we should’.

The prime minister pictured arriving in the UK where he is attending the G7 summit as an observer

Scott Morrison (pictured) has announced that Australia's suppression strategy which has kept the nation's borders closed will remain in place. Pictured: The prime minister at the G7 summit

Scott Morrison (pictured) has announced that Australia’s suppression strategy which has kept the nation’s borders closed will remain in place. Pictured: The prime minister at the G7 summit

Mr Morrison said he would ‘rather be living in the arrangements we have in Australia than anywhere else in the world’ and that the UK, despite a high vaccination rate, was still recording high numbers of new cases.

Australia’s suppression strategy has kept the nation’s borders closed and seen states go into lockdown over a handful of cases.

‘At this stage of the pandemic, it is not clear where it goes next… (given) the potential for new strains and other things to occur,’ Mr Morrison said.

Mr Morrison said Australians can ‘go to sporting games, or they can go to work, they can live in an economy that is bigger today than it was before’.

Last year, the Government predicted international borders would be open in October 2021 after the adult population had been offered a vaccine. 

However, in May, Scott Morrison announced the date would be pushed back to mid-2022, even as other highly-vaccinated countries such as the US and UK start to open their borders.

Finance Minister Simon Birmingham said the date was revised amid the slow vaccine rollout and uncertainty over the Covid-19 vaccine’s ability to protect against mutating strains of the virus. 

Mr Morrison revealed he has not set a target for the number of vaccinations that need to be administered before international travel would resume. Pictured: passengers arrive at Sydney airport's international terminal

Mr Morrison revealed he has not set a target for the number of vaccinations that need to be administered before international travel would resume. Pictured: passengers arrive at Sydney airport’s international terminal 

Mr Morrison’s travel update comes after Melbourne emerged from a two-week lockdown on Friday, but restrictions on home gatherings, travel and mask use remain in place.

Victoria recorded two new cases on Monday out of almost 17,000 tests, and four more in hotel quarantine.

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There was one new local case on Sunday, a close contact of a case linked to the Arcare Maidstone outbreak who has been quarantining throughout their infectious period. They are not an aged care resident.

Authorities continue to investigate the single new case reported on Saturday, a man in his 30s from City of Melbourne with a young family.

About 2,000 people are currently quarantining across Victoria.

Meanwhile, there is growing optimism Queensland will be spared an outbreak after a couple arrived from Melbourne while they were infected.

There were no new locally-acquired cases reported in Queensland on Saturday or Sunday, with local police yet to interview the couple.

There were 5,834,746 vaccines administered to Friday nationwide.

There have been around 5,834,746 vaccines administered nationwide as of Friday

There have been around 5,834,746 vaccines administered nationwide as of Friday 

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