Advertisement
Advertisement
Coronavirus pandemic: All stories
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
A Royal New Zealand Air Force NH90 helicopter on patrol. Photo: Airbus

New Zealand orders military to watch over borders after quarantine bungle allowed coronavirus back in

  • A 24-day run with no new cases was broken on Tuesday when it emerged two women from Britain had been allowed out of quarantine early without testing
  • The pair were eventually found to be infected, but only after they made a 650 kilometre road-trip from Auckland to Wellington to see a dying relative
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern ordered the military to oversee the country’s borders on Wednesday after a bungle that allowed two people with coronavirus to leave quarantine.
A 24-day run with no new cases was broken on Tuesday when it emerged two women who recently arrived from Britain were allowed out of quarantine early without being tested for the virus, even though one had mild symptoms.

Why food security matters – and why we should all move to New Zealand

The pair were eventually swabbed and proved to be infected, but only after they made a 650 kilometre road-trip from Auckland to Wellington to see a dying relative.

Ardern said it was “absolutely nonsensical” they were not tested earlier and it was clear border controls needed to be tightened to prevent similar failures.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said it was ‘absolutely nonsensical’ that the pair were not tested earlier. Photo: New Zealand Herald / Mark Mitchell

She said Assistant Chief of Defence Digby Webb had been appointed to oversee border quarantine operations and was being given access to military personnel and logistical expertise.

“My view is that we need the rigour, we need the confidence, we need the discipline that the military can provide,” Ardern told reporters.

New Zealand eases border rules after row over exemption to ‘Avatar’ crew

Health Minister David Clark acknowledged widespread anger at the blunder. Kiwis endured a stringent seven-week lockdown to eliminate the virus in the country which has recorded only 1,156 cases and 22 deaths in a population of five million.

“New Zealanders have made great sacrifices to make it to this point,” he told Radio New Zealand. “Our system has performed incredibly well as a whole in New Zealand. We have eliminated Covid-19 but I want this fixed straight away.”

Health Minister David Clark said New Zealand had successfully eliminated the virus. Photo: New Zealand Herald / Mark Mitchelll

The South Pacific nation last week scrapped domestic social distancing measures, while maintaining strong border restrictions.

The changes have heralded a return to near-normality, with sports matches played in front of sold-out stadiums, nightclubs open and thousands gathering for events such as Black Lives Matter Protests without restrictions.

Clark said it was unacceptable that mistakes at the border, which is now seen as the front line in the fight against Covid-19, could put such gains at risk. “We’re the envy of the world in many ways and we want to continue being the envy of the world,” he said.

New Zealand’s borders are open only to returning Kiwis and their families, besides some exceptions for some foreigners on business and compassionate grounds, with everyone expected to undergo two weeks mandatory quarantine.

Officials say there are around 3,500 people in border quarantine, mostly staying in hotels where they are expected to remain isolated in their rooms and avoid social contact.

The programme that allowed recent arrivals to leave isolation early on compassionate grounds has been suspended and everyone in quarantine must test negative for the virus before they are allowed back into the community.

Ardern stressed that the women at the centre of the furore had done nothing wrong and complied with health protocols at all times.

They remain in isolation in Wellington as health officials scramble to test about 320 people they had contact with while in New Zealand.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Military to step in after quarantine gaffe
Post