On Wednesday, New Zealand’s city streets were mostly deserted as the country resumed life in lockdown for the first time in six months in an effort to stem the spread of the infectious Delta strain of COVID-19.
New Zealand has been virus-free and free until Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced a three-day statewide lockdown on Tuesday after a single case, presumed to be Delta, was discovered in the country’s largest city, Auckland.
Ardern announced on Wednesday that the number of positive cases had climbed to 7, all of which were related to the original illness, though modeling projected that the number of cases could rise to 50 to 100.
“From the experience of what we’ve seen overseas, we are absolutely anticipating more cases,” Ardern told a media conference.
However, the move to lockdown would put the country “in a much less risky position,” she added.
New Zealand will be in level 4 lockdown, the highest alert level, for at least three days, while Auckland will remain in lockdown for seven days.
Ardern said genome sequencing had shown the Auckland case was linked to an outbreak in neighbouring Australia’s New South Wales state, but it was still not clear how Delta had entered the community.
In the capital Wellington few people ventured out in the city centre, which would normally be bustling with shoppers and office workers, while television footage showed similar scenes in Auckland.
Panic buying erupted after the lockdown announcement on Tuesday, with people stocking essentials at supermarkets despite repeated assurances from the government that there will be no shortage in supplies.
Businesses and schools scrambled to move online.
VACCINE FAILURE
Ardern has won praise for containing local transmission of COVID-19 via an elimination strategy, imposing tough lockdowns and shutting New Zealand’s international border in March 2020.
The last reported community case of COVID-19 in New Zealand was in February, with about 2,500 confirmed cases overall and 26 deaths, and citizens have been living without restrictions.
Ardern’s success helped her secure a second term in office, but her popularity is being dented by delays with a vaccine rollout, as well as rising costs in a country heavily reliant on an immigrant workforce.
Just over 21% of the country’s 5 million people have been fully vaccinated so far, the slowest among OECD nations.
Opposition National Party leader Judith Collins said the country had little choice but to go into lockdown.
“If there’s a failure, it is around getting vaccinations into the country and then getting them into people,” she told state broadcaster 1News.
The government has suspended the vaccine programme to ensure safety measures are in place to handle the current outbreak.
Finance Minister Grant Robertson said the government will reinstate a wage subsidy from Friday if the country is still in lockdown.