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NZ halves Covid managed isolation days

By IANS | Updated: October 28, 2021 15:20 IST

Wellington, Oct 28 The New Zealand government is starting a phased easing of border restrictions that will see ...

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Wellington, Oct 28 The New Zealand government is starting a phased easing of border restrictions that will see the time spent in a managed isolation and quarantine facility (MIQ) halved for fully vaccinated overseas arrivals from November 14 and home isolation introduced in the first quarter of 2022 at the latest.

The time overseas arrivals spend in MIQ facilities will be halved from 14 days to seven days followed by home isolation until they return a negative day 9 test, Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins told reporters here on Thursday.

The vast majority of border cases have returned positive results within the first seven days, Hipkins said.

Over 183,000 New Zealanders have returned home through MIQ since border restrictions were put in place last year, stopping cases at the border for the last 18 months, Xinhua news agency quoted the Minister as saying.

"When MIQ was introduced, we didn't have the vaccine so every arrival posed a high level of risk. With most people returning now fully vaccinated the risk profile of international arrivals has changed so it is time to start changing our MIQ settings."

Last week, New Zealand announced a roadmap out of lockdowns with the new traffic light Covid-19 Protection Framework that will see an easing of restrictions once the country is 90 percent vaccinated.

Thursday's easing of MIQ requirements is part of the country's broader plan to re-open New Zealand safely and reconnect with the world, he added.

From November 14, arrivals will be tested on day 0/1, day 3, and day 6/7 testing, followed by a short period of self-isolation at home which is around three days, the Minister said.

A rapid antigen test and health checks will be carried out on day 7 before a person leaves MIQ, and people will get a viral test on day 9 of their home isolation and stay at home until the result comes back, he said.

This evolution of MIQ will initially free up more than 1,500 rooms a month to support the current Auckland community outbreak and to be released for more overseas returnees.

Meanwhile, New Zealand is also expanding one-way quarantine free travel from Samoa, Tonga and Vanuatu to include travellers from those countries and Tokelau who have the right to reside permanently in New Zealand and people covered by border exceptions, from November 8, Hipkins said.

Pacific travellers must be fully vaccinated, unless they are New Zealand citizens.

Recognised Seasonal Employer workers are currently required to have at least one dose, and will be required to be fully vaccinated from January 1, 2022.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: XinhuaAucklandWellingtonChris hipkins
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