Australian soldiers to help with Covid-19 checks as PM sets plan to freedom

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Australian soldiers to help with Covid-19 checks as PM sets plan to freedom
Australian soldiers will help to enforce coronavirus isolation orders in the hard-hit city of Sydney, police said on Friday (Jul 30), as resentment seethed in some communities over new curbs to stem the highly contagious Delta variant. Prime Minister Scott Morrison held out hope of better times with a four-stage plan back to freedom but said 80 percent of adults would have to be vaccinated before the border can begin to open.

Sydney's 5 million people are under a strict stay-at-home order because of a worrying surge of nearly 3,000 infections since the middle of June. Authorities have this week outlined even tighter restrictions for some worst-affected suburbs, including mandatory testing and mask-wearing outdoors.

From Monday, some 300 army personnel will help police go door to door to ensure people who have tested positive are isolating, New South Wales police commissioner Mick Fuller told a news conference. "The sheer volume of increase over the last week, the level of compliance has gone from hundreds into thousands," he said. The military personnel will not be armed and will be under police command, he said.

Australia had handled the coronavirus crisis much better than many other developed countries, with just over 34,000 cases and fewer than 1,000 deaths. But it has been achieved that largely by sealing its border to all but a trickle of people since the pandemic began. A vaccination drive that got off to a slow start because of a shortage of doses - only 18 percent of adults are fully vaccinated - coupled with the emergence of the virulent Delta variant have triggered new clusters, shaken public confidence, and stirred anger.
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