Coronavirus: New Zealand PM says outbreak will ‘get worse’

Jacinda Ardern sounds warning as number of cases in locked-down Auckland rises to 17

Covid-19 may have been circulating in New Zealand’s biggest city for weeks, the country’s top health official has said, as 13 new community cases were confirmed – all linked to the four cases announced on Tuesday.

The prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, said the growing cluster in Auckland, now totalling 17, "would get worse before it gets better" in the city of more than 1.4 million people.

New Zealanders have been shocked by the return of the virus after 102 days without community transmission, having become renowned around the world for the country’s successful Covid-19 elimination strategy.

“Once again we are reminded of how tricky this virus is and how easily it can spread,” Ms Ardern said. “Going hard and early is still the best course of action.”

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The country’s deputy prime minister, Winston Peters, later said a “breach” in quarantine was responsible for the new cluster of cases. He told ABC news that a high-level source had told him a “breach in quarantine” had led to the community outbreak.

“I think there’s been a breach inside our quarantine system, and I think, when that comes out very shortly, in a matter of maybe less than a day, we’ll find out that was the case,” Mr Peters told the ABC.

Mr Peters went on to say he was unsure if the breach had occurred at a quarantine hotel, of which there are more than 30 around the country, but how and where it happened must be urgently investigated, and security tightened.

Auckland lockdown

The prospect of a long level 3 lockdown inAuckland is becoming ever more likely. A decision is expected on Friday. Auckland is nearing the end of an initital three-day level 3 lockdown in which people are advised to stay at home unless they need to travel for work, or they are shopping or exercising. All schools and childcare centres, and non-essential businesses have closed.

Thirty-six cases are now active in the country, including those in managed quarantine facilities. One of the new cases announced on Thursday was at the Mount Albert grammar school in Auckland, and was confirmed to be a relative of someone in the initial outbreak. The infected student attended class on Monday, and local health authorities said they were contacting and isolating around 100 close contacts they had while at school.

“As we all learnt from our first experience with Covid, once you identify a cluster, it grows before it slows. We should expect that to be the case here,” Ms Ardern told a media briefing in Wellington. “We can see the seriousness of the situation we are in. It’s being dealt with in an urgent but calm and methodical way.”

Dr Ashley Bloomfield, the director-general of health, said all active cases would now be required to enter government-managed quarantine, in a departure from a previous policy which had allowed infected people to self-isolate at home, or be admitted to hospital if they were severely ill.

Dr Bloomfield said despite people’s best intentions many were visited by friends and family when they fell ill, and placing infected people in mandatory quarantine was the country’s best bet at containing the spread. He admitted some Covid-19 patients had resisted the new measure.

One of the infected people worked in an Auckland cool store, and it was being explored whether the virus entered the country on imported freight, though Dr Bloomfield stressed this scenario was “very unlikely”. The cool store had been swabbed to rule it out as a source of infection.

New Zealand health officials say it's only a matter of time before they solve the mystery outbreak. Outside of Auckland the rest of the country has had its alert level raised from 1 to 2.

Experts agreed that until the original source of the virus is identified, Auckland’s lockdown would likely be extended past the midnight Friday deadline.

Protest

A protest against lockdown measures was held in the Northland city of Whangarei on Thursday, but police said they encountered little resistance to the measures in Auckland itself.

The contact tracing, isolation and testing process has been identified as crucial in New Zealand which, unlike other countries, has pursued an elimination strategy of the virus.

It proved successful back in autumn when a 51-day lockdown eradicated the virus from the community and allowed Kiwis to return to their normal lives, aside from strict border controls.

The new outbreak has returned New Zealanders to a lockdown tradition: waiting for Ms Ardern’s daily 1pm press conference to learn the numbers of new cases.

When the cabinet meets on Friday it must also consider whether to postpone a national election slated for September 19th. – Guardian