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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Laura Sharman

Australia eases international travel ban for first time since Covid

Australia is easing its border ban on some foreign travellers for the first time in the pandemic.

Vaccinated students and skilled workers can come into Australia without having to quarantine from December 1 as the country relaxes its Covid restrictions.

Prime Minsiter Scott Morrison described it as a “major milestone” in Australia’s “pathway back” and said the Government expects 200,000 arrivals by January.

From next week, skilled workers and travellers on working holidays will be allowed to land at Sydney and Melbourne airports without needing to seek exemptions from a travel ban.

People dining along Degraves Street on November 18 in Melbourne, Australia (Getty Images)

Mr Morrison added: “It’s a major milestone about what Australians have been able to achieve and enable us to do.”

Vaccinated citizens of Japan and South Korea will also be allowed in without self-isolating as well as people on humanitarian visas.

But the Government has yet to decide when general tourists will be allowed to return.

“I think Australians are very keen to see us take this step-by-step approach,” Mr Morrison said.

“They’ve been through a lot and they’ve sacrificed a lot to ensure that we can open safely so we can stay safely open.”

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child returns to the stage in Melbourne after 570 performances were cancelled due to lockdown rules (Getty Images)

While vaccinated travellers will be able to arrive without quarantining in New South Wales and Victoria, Australia‘s most populous states, parts of the country with lower vaccination rates still impose pandemic restrictions at state lines.

After a troubled start, Australia‘s vaccine rollout has gathered pace with more than 85 per cent of the population aged 16 and older now fully vaccinated.

Australia first reopened its border to quarantine-free travellers on November 1 , 20 months after some of the most draconian pandemic restrictions adopted by any democratic country.

The first arrivals were restricted to Australian citizens and permanent residents.

The latest change comes as some Australian farmers left fruit and vegetables to rot in fields because the backpackers who provide the seasonal workforce of pickers were absent over the past year.

Universities Australia chief executive Catrina Jackson said her sector lost around £971 million last year because foreign students were locked out.

Live music returned to Melbourne Australia as Covid restrictions eased on October 30 (Getty Images)

“We’ve got 130,000 students waiting to get back into this country. They’ve been so patient and they’ve been so resolute. They’ve been studying online for... almost two years now,” Ms Jackson told Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

“Some of them have just got a year left of their degree. It really is time to get them back into the country so they can finish their degree and get on with their lives.”

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