Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Australia-New Zealand

COVID-19: New Zealand announces return of coronavirus after 102 days

Health authorities repeatedly warned people not to be complacent



The city's skyline is seen from an observation deck at Mount Victoria Lookout in Wellington, New Zealand, on Wednesday, July 29, 2020. New Zealand’s border is closed to all foreigners, while citizens and permanent residents entering the country must undertake a 14-day mandatory quarantine.
Image Credit: Bloomberg

Wellington: New Zealand announced its first locally transmitted coronavirus infections more than 100 days on Tuesday and issued a stay-at-home lockdown order for the country's largest city.

After receiving global praise for its success containing the virus, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said four cases had been detected in a single family in Auckland from an unknown source.

ALSO SEE

"After 102 days, we have our first cases of COVID-19 outside of managed isolation or quarantine facilities... we have all worked incredibly hard to prevent this scenario," she told the country in a televised address.

"We have also planned and prepared for it."

Advertisement

Until Tuesday, the World Health Organisation had hailed the country as an example to others for having "successfully eliminated community transmission".

New Zealand reported just 22 deaths in a population of 22 million and had not recorded community transmission since May 1.

As a result, New Zealanders had been enjoying a near-normal lifestyle with no social distancing and spectators allowed at sports and cultural events.

But health authorities had repeatedly warned people not to be complacent and said a second wave of infections was "inevitable".

Auckland will be locked down for at least three days from Wednesday and some social distancing restrictions will be reintroduced in the rest of the country.

Advertisement