Tourism reels as Australian leaders bicker over closed borders

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CANBERRA (BLOOMBERG) - In Australia's tropical north, Kate Agrums was hopeful her river-cruise business would get an influx of tourists eager to spot crocodiles when the coronavirus lockdown began easing earlier this month.. Read more at straitstimes.com.

CANBERRA - In Australia's tropical north, Kate Agrums was hopeful her river-cruise business would get an influx of tourists eager to spot crocodiles when the coronavirus lockdown began easing earlier this month.

"With the border closed, we're not hopeful that we will get any visitors for months. There's a lot of businesses here that won't survive." The engine room of the economy, the two states have kept their borders open, but are still trying to contain isolated outbreaks, such as recent clusters detected in a Sydney age-care home and a Melbourne meatworks.

After New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian urged her Queensland counterpart Annastacia Palaszczuk to remove restrictions to stop the nation from"falling off an economic cliff," the response was curt. She's since toughened her stance, saying Queensland won't reopen until Australia records no new cases for at least a month.

The border closure has the travel industry up in arms. According to Simon Westaway, executive director of the Australian Tourism Industry Council, Queensland is a vital tourism cog that's already lost an estimated A$9 billion due to the lockdown.

Source: News Formal (newsformal.com)

 

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