Northern Territory to open borders to regional Victorians after they 'crushed' coronavirus

The Northern Territory plans to allow residents of regional Victoria to visit from 2 November.

NT Chief Minister Michael Gunner.

NT Chief Minister Michael Gunner says regional Victorians have "crushed" coronavirus. Source: AAP

The Northern Territory will ease travel restrictions on regional Victoria from next month after it "crushed" the coronavirus, and could do the same for metropolitan Melbourne.

Regional residents will be able to travel freely to the NT from 2 November, so long as coronavirus case numbers remain low, the territory government announced on Monday.

"We can confirm we are now happy enough with the progress made in regional Victoria to flag a future change in their hotspot status, provided things keep progressing the way they are," Chief Minister Michael Gunner said at a press conference.
The hotspot declaration will be removed for all Victorian regional local government areas outside of metropolitan Melbourne - with the exception of Greater Geelong, Mitchell Shire and East Gippsland Shire.

Mr Gunner is holding back on Melbourne, Greater Geelong, Mitchell Shire and East Gippsland Shire because he wants to make sure cases confirmed in the past fortnight are not linked to community transmission.

"Once we are sure of that, we can be in a position to add these areas to the list of hotspots removed in four weeks," he added.

"That's likely to happen but it's not something we are confirming today."

Mr Gunner noted almost all of regional Victoria had not had a confirmed case of COVID-19 in the past fortnight.

"All the numbers basically amount to this - regional Victoria has crushed the coronavirus," he said.
Victoria on Monday recorded nine new cases of coronavirus, leaving Melbourne's 14-day rolling case average at 11.6 and regional Victoria at 0.3.

There have been 13 "mystery" cases in Melbourne between 19 September and 2 October and none in regional Victoria.

"It's hard to think of another place in the world that has successfully crushed two coronavirus waves, and Melbourne is on the cusp of doing that," Mr Gunner said of the Victorian government's management of the crisis.

As of 8am Sunday, the NT had no active cases of coronavirus. It's had 34 cases during the pandemic to date and all have recovered.

NSW has reported no new cases of locally transmitted COVID-19 for the tenth consecutive day. The one new case reported was a returned overseas traveller in hotel quarantine.

Queensland said it had no new coronavirus cases on Monday.

People in Australia must stay at least 1.5 metres away from others. Check your jurisdiction's restrictions on gathering limits. If you are experiencing cold or flu symptoms, stay home and arrange a test by calling your doctor or contact the Coronavirus Health Information Hotline on 1800 020 080. News and information is available in 63 languages at

Please check the relevant guidelines for your state or territory: , , , , , ,


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Published 5 October 2020 11:20am
Updated 5 October 2020 12:28pm



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