MELBOURNE • Millions in Australia’s second-biggest city went into lockdown yesterday to battle another coronavirus outbreak, as spikes across the world added to the devastation already wrought by the pandemic.
The number of infections and deaths has risen relentlessly in many of the world’s biggest nations, with the US crossing three million confirmed cases (at press time).
In Melbourne, five million people began a new lockdown just weeks after earlier restrictions ended as Australia battles a Covid-19 resurgence, with residents bracing for the emotional and economic costs.
“The idea of not being able to see people that you love and care for is really distressing, really distressing,” said a tearful Melbourne resident, Monica Marshall, whose 91-year-old mother recently entered a care home.
“I hope that people have got the message that they really need to take notice — it’s very disconcerting watching some people on the news where they really don’t care.” With no vaccine or effective treatment available, experts have warned that social distancing is necessary to contain the virus — despite opposition in many parts of the world due to economic costs and misinformation.
Shoppers in Victoria state stripped shelves bare on Wednesday before the lockdown began, and the country’s largest supermarket chain said it had reimposed buying limits on items including pasta, vegetables and sugar.
Across the world in Europe, where many nations have successfully suppressed their outbreaks, the French government said it remained on alert for a possible surge in cases too.
The coronavirus is known to have infected nearly 12 million people, with deaths approaching 550,000 (at press time) and the global economy suffering a catastrophic downturn.
The US remains the worst-hit nation, with confirmed cases topping three million, but President Donald Trump remains keen for the economy to restart despite warnings about the dangers of reopening too soon.
He has even faced-off with his own government’s experts, lashing out at the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention for issuing school reopening guidelines that he complained were too restrictive. —AFP