COVID India: Scott Morrison confirms when India flight ban will end, three charter flights set for May
Scott Morrison has confirmed when the India flight ban will end, but COVID-stricken Aussies will not be allowed on rescue flights.
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Australians stranded in India will return home on rescue flights from May 15, but those infected with the virus will not be on board.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison confirmed on Friday the government’s controversial India travel ban will be lifted on May 15, allowing Australians stuck in the COVID-ravaged country to return home.
Mr Morrison said it was unclear how many of the 9,000 Australians stranded in India had contracted the virus, but said anyone who tested positive would not be allowed to board repatriation flight.
“We have rapid antigen testing in place to give ourselves a greater sense of surety that if we are bringing people back to Australia we are minimising the risk of COVID cases of being brought into the country,” he said.
The government in April banned Australians from returning as the India grapples with the world’s worst COVID-19 outbreak, with those in breach threatened with five years in jail or $66,000 fines.
The measures will be reviewed on May 15, but Mr Morrison confirmed a meeting of cabinet’s national security committee on Thursday had resolved to resume repatriation flights on that day.
“That biosecurity order is working exactly as it was intended to, and that will remain in place with no change until May 15,” he said.
“The national security committee of cabinet has confirmed it will have done its job by then, and as a result we see no need to extend it beyond that date.”
The PM ruled out the prospect of the ban being lifted before May 15, saying the measure had been calibrated to ensure repatriation flights returned only when safe.
“It was the smart, sensible, wise and compassionate thing to do to put the pause in place,” he said.
Under the proposal, one repatriation flight per week will be organised and returning Australians will head to the Howard Springs facility in Darwin, rather than the hotel quarantine system.
Mr Morrison said the measure did not point to a lack of confidence in the hotel quarantine system.
“If I told you over a year ago we would have put in place a quarantine system that had 99.99 per cent effectiveness, I’m sure you wouldn’t believe me. But that is what Australia has achieved,” he said.
India recorded 412,262 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday, the world’s biggest single-day increase since the pandemic began, as the country’s health system buckled under the escalating caseload.
The federal government last month announced it would send a range of medical supplies, including oxygen, to alleviate the growing crisis.
Australia’s top universities have also written to the federal government offering their support.
Group of Eight chief executive Vicki Thomson this week contacted Foreign Affairs Minister Marise Payne and Australia’s High Commissioner to India, Barry O’Farrell, after the controversial travel ban was imposed between the two nations.
Ms Thomson said Indian students had stuck by their universities since Australia’s borders closed in March 2020.
“Many have continued to study online from their homes in India,” she said.
“Group of Eight universities are committed to offering their expertise and ongoing financial and social support to our Indian students, and colleagues, during this most challenging of periods.”
Monash University manages a research academy in partnership with the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay in Mumbai.
The campus remains in lockdown, affecting 200 joint PHD students, and staff.
Financial hardship packages, the extension of study timelines and mental health support have already been made available to affected students.
The University of Melbourne is also investigating ways to scale up a device that would enable low-pressure oxygen to be provided without electricity for remote areas.
Australians have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars in under a week to ship critical medical supplies to India.
Countless fundraisers have been set up in recent days via GoFundMe, with the organisation setting up a central hub due to popularity.
One fundraiser, Medical Oxygen For All, has already raised over $300,000, and had shipments already arrive in Uttar Pradesh earlier this week.
“Indian Australians are in a unique position to help and the close-knit nature of their community is shining through. They are hearing first-hand the needs of loved ones on the ground in India, and are able to lean on the Australian community to provide help,” GoFundMe’s regional manager, Nicola Britton, says.
“We understand that funds are needed urgently. A team of GoFundMe Trust and Safety experts are working around the clock to support the surge in fundraising for India. Dedicated crisis managers are verifying fundraisers to facilitate the fast release of funds.”
POPE HAILS ‘TIRELESS’ WORK OF INDIA MEDICS
Pope Francis hailed Thursday the “tireless” work of medics in India and urged them to stay strong, in a message of support for the coronavirus-plagued country.
In a message to the Catholic Bishops’ Conference in India, the pontiff offered his “heartfelt solidarity and spiritual closeness to all the Indian people”.
“My thoughts go above all to the sick and their families, to those who care for them, and in particular to those who are mourning the loss of their loved ones,” he said.
“I think too of the many doctors, nurses, hospital workers, ambulance drivers and those working tirelessly to respond to the immediate needs of their brothers and sisters.
“With deep appreciation I invoke upon all of them God’s gifts of perseverance, strength and peace.”
India is battling a wave of COVID-19 infections that has seen patients die in streets outside hospitals due to shortages of beds and oxygen.
PM DEFENDS INDIA BAN
Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Wednesday quashed growing fears over a potential fallout with India following the government’s ban on Australians returning from the COVID-ravaged nation.
“India is a great friend of Australia,” Mr Morrison said, adding he was “not concerned” about the health of relationship.
Under current federal law, Australian citizens returning from India before May 15 face jail time and significant fines.
Earlier this week, the federal opposition said the ban “flies in the face” of the close bond required between Australia and India in its handling of China.
But Mr Morrison said Australia was providing India with “significant humanitarian effort”, which includes sending respirators, masks and oxygen, after cases in India surpassed 20 million.
“The pause will enable us to get Australian citizens and residents and their immediate families back on repatriation flights,” Mr Morrison said.
“Without it, we would be eroding our capability to do that over the medium to longer term, so this was a necessary step.
– with AFP
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Originally published as COVID India: Scott Morrison confirms when India flight ban will end, three charter flights set for May