“The number of detected COVID-19 infections today has reached 3,085, which is triple the positive cases one month ago, and we must prepare for this number to continue rising,“ Manning said. “Now is the time for all of our people to be reminded how serious this threat is to us and continue to take precautions to stop the spread.”
He called on people to wear face masks, wash their hands constantly, and maintain social distancing everywhere possible.
“The problem is all the usual patients keep on coming,“ Mola said. ”The sick kids, the women in labour, car accidents, the knife wounds that just arrives at emergency and at the maternity section.”
“By the time we get to 50 percent [of staff testing positive], we’ll have to close the doors. At that point, we can’t carry on with the service.
“We’ll reach a critical point where we have to close the doors, and then there will be absolute chaos, of course, because people will just keep coming, but they’ll be turned away at the gate. Then there will be riots, I tell you,” he said.
The Australian government has promised the PNG government 8,000 AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines from its own stockpile to help with the outbreak. It is also making a formal request to AstraZeneca and European Authorities for one million doses of Australia’s contracted supplies to gift to PNG.
“Our early vaccine assistance will be coordinated with the Papua New Guinean Government’s response, which has included their COVID-19 National Pandemic Response taskforce. We will also work with the WHO and UNICEF to ensure that it complements PNG’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout plan,” the release said.
“We are conscious of the close family and cultural connections of those people living in the Torres Strait Protected Zone. Both Governments are determined to protect our respective communities and avoid any cross-border COVID-19 transmission,” the release said.
Australia will also deploy a team of three Australian Medical Assistance Team (AUSMAT) health specialists to Port Moresby to work with local health authorities on infection control, triage, and emergency management and public health measures.
Passenger flights between Australia and PNG have been suspended, except for freight, medivac, or humanitarian flights.
The quick offer of Australian aid comes after the PNG government refuted Beijing’s claim that PNG had agreed to allow the communist regime to provide vaccine aid in February.
Acting Foreign Minister Rainbo Paita denied the claims by Beijing Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian, who wrote on Twitter saying that Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi had spoken to Paita and they had agreed that China would supply PNG with vaccines.
“I said that we were aware of China’s assistance to some of the countries in the world for those vaccines. But I said we had our own internal processes,” he said.