PM Ardern dances for joy, lifts restrictions as New Zealand eliminates coronavirus

"While the job is not done, there is no denying this is a milestone ... Thank you, New Zealand," Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told a news conference. Picture: IANS

"While the job is not done, there is no denying this is a milestone ... Thank you, New Zealand," Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told a news conference. Picture: IANS

Published Jun 9, 2020

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Wellington - New Zealand lifted all social

and economic restrictions except border controls after declaring

on Monday it was free of the coronavirus, one of the first

countries in the world to return to pre-pandemic normality.

Public and private events, the retail and hospitality

industries and all public transport were allowed to resume

without the distancing rules still in place across much of the

world.

"While the job is not done, there is no denying this is a

milestone ... Thank you, New Zealand," Prime Minister Jacinda

Ardern told a news conference, saying she had danced for joy at

the news.

"We are confident we have eliminated transmission of the

virus in New Zealand for now, but elimination is not a point in

time, it is a sustained effort."

New Zealand's 5 million people are emerging from the

pandemic while big economies such as Brazil, Britain, India and

the United States continue to grapple with spread of the virus.

Its 75 days of restrictions included about seven weeks of a

strict lockdown in which most businesses were shut and everyone

except essential workers had to stay home.

"Today, 75 days later, we are ready," Ardern said,

announcing that social distancing restrictions would end at

midnight.

Ardern said she had done a "little dance" when she was told

there were no more active Covid-19 cases in New Zealand,

surprising her two-year-old daughter, Neve.

"She was caught a little by surprise and she joined it

having absolutely no idea why I was dancing around the lounge."

New Zealand has reported 1,154 infections and 22 deaths from

Covid-19 since the virus arrived in late February.

Ardern had vowed to eliminate, not merely contain, the

virus, which meant stopping transmission for two weeks after the

last known case was cleared. For now, everyone entering the

country will continue to be tested and quarantined.

Ardern was quickly trending on Twitter, and many said they

wanted to move to New Zealand.

"Such news really brightens up your day! There is hope and

this too shall pass for the entire world," one user tweeted.

Former prime minister Helen Clark tweeted: "Clear leadership

and an engaged public have produced this result."

Ardern, 39, has won global praise for her leadership during

the pandemic.

Her popularity at home has soared and recent surveys suggest

she is well placed to win a second term in September's election.

Even so, the government will need to show it can revive the

economy, which is expected to sink into recession.

Opposition parties have criticised Ardern's decision to

maintain restrictions for so long.

Ardern did not commit to a timeline for a quarantine-free

'travel bubble' with Australia to facilitate tourism that the

industries in both countries have been pushing for.

"We will need to move cautiously here. No one wants to

jeopardize the gains New Zealand has made," she said.

Reuters

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