Australia opens up more borders in domestic travel boost, eyes vaccine

Australia opens up more borders in domestic travel boost, eyes vaccine

Australia opens up more borders in domestic travel boost, eyes vaccine

an hour ago

Medical workers are seen at a COVID-19 testing centre at Bondi Beach in Sydney. Loren Elliott/Reuters

Australia will lift more internal border restrictions in a boost for tourism as new coronavirus infections slow to a trickle, while first vaccines could be available in March, a government minister said on Tuesday.

Queensland state, a popular holiday destination, will allow visitors next week from the country's two most populous states, New South Wales (NSW) and Victoria, after closing its borders in August.

NSW has since notched a month without any COVID-19 cases where the source is unknown and restrictions on arrivals from Sydney will be eased on Dec.1, Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said.

Residents of Victoria, previously the country's coronavirus hotspot, will also be welcomed if the state has no new cases on Wednesday, which would mark 26 days without community transmission.

"Queensland is good to go,“ Palaszczuk told reporters in Brisbane.

A jogger passes a COVID-19 public health warning sign at Bondi Beach in Sydney.

NSW and Victoria opened their border on Monday, while the South Australia-Victorian border opens fully next week, in welcome news for local airline companies, Qantas Airways and Virgin Australia.

Qantas said it