Australia’s largest city, Sydney, has emerged from Covid lockdown after almost four months, with locals celebrating a range of new freedoms.
People queued for pubs and shops that opened at midnight on Monday. Many others have been enjoying anticipated reunions with relatives and friends.
Household visits and travel had been banned beyond a 5km (3.1 mile) zone.
Sydney exited lockdown after New South Wales state reached a 70% double-dose vaccination target for over-16s.
Most restrictions have now been eased for fully vaccinated people.
People can now share meals together at reopened cafes and restaurants, and visit gyms, libraries and pools. There were long queues for barbers and nail salons on Monday.
The Lord Gladstone Hotel, an inner city pub, was doing a roaring lunch trade after months of limited trading and takeaway-only options.
“We’re stoked to be back, we’re having the best Monday in months, even before Covid,” Pat Blake, the pub’s licensee, told the BBC.
“People are just ready to come back and sit down for a schooie [beer], see their friends, be somewhere there’s always music playing,” he said.
More restrictions will ease when 80% of over-16s are fully vaccinated. Currently, over 90% have received a first dose.
“It’s been a difficult 100 days,” state Premier Dominic Perrottet said on Monday.
“But the efforts that people have made right across the state, to go out and get vaccinated, has enabled this great day.”
Mr Perrottet warned that NSW was bracing for a surge in Covid cases, but said the healthcare system had been preparing for weeks.
“We’ll see hospitalisations increase… but we need to learn to live alongside the virus,” he said.
The state has not yet imposed a system to check vaccination status, leaving it up to individual businesses.
Sydney’s lockdown began in late June after a Delta variant outbreak took hold, leading to more than 50,000 infections and 439 deaths.
More restrictions will ease when 80% of over-16s are fully vaccinated. Currently, over 90% have received a first dose.
“It’s been a difficult 100 days,” state Premier Dominic Perrottet said on Monday.
“But the efforts that people have made right across the state, to go out and get vaccinated, has enabled this great day.”
Mr Perrottet warned that NSW was bracing for a surge in Covid cases, but said the healthcare system had been preparing for weeks.
“We’ll see hospitalisations increase… but we need to learn to live alongside the virus,” he said.
The state has not yet imposed a system to check vaccination status, leaving it up to individual businesses.
Sydney’s lockdown began in late June after a Delta variant outbreak took hold, leading to more than 50,000 infections and 439 deaths.
Australia had previously adhered to a Covid elimination strategy, and this remains the objective in some states.
But the rapid spread of the Delta variant forced a greater focus on vaccination efforts so Australia could switch to “living with the virus”.
Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory have remained virus-free after shutting their borders to infected states.
Authorities have flagged that Australians living abroad could travel back into Sydney next month, as the nation’s borders reopen.