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Reconsider your overseas holiday now: Peter Dutton’s coronavirus warning
Travelling overseas soon? Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton has dramatically warned Aussies to reconsider their travel anywhere, as the coronavirus continues to spread.
	
	
		
			
			
				
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How are airlines going to fill aircraft now ? Major cutbacks coming & layoffs ?
AUSTRALIANS should reconsider any overseas travel, Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton dramatically warned as the country increases its security measures to protect itself against the spread of the new coronavirus.
The senior Morrison Government Minister also took a swipe at Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, accusing her of breaching the confidence of chief medical officers for political gain.
It follows Australia warning people not to travel to China, the epicentre of the outbreak, and blocking tourists coming from China from entering the country.
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	Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton says Australians should reconsider their need to travel overseas at the moment. Picture: AAP Image/Lukas Coch
But Mr Dutton this morning warned that the virus situation was not likely to improve in the short term.
“We hope China can contain the issue and that we can move on from it as quickly as possible, but it’s likely to be more protracted than that,” he told Sky News.
“We need to deal with that. We need Australians frankly, if they’re considering a holiday at the moment to reconsider whether an outbound overseas trip is what they want to do.
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“If they’ve thought about staying in parts of Australia, regional Australia, in particular, now might be a good time to book that holiday.”
He said holidaying at home could help tourist operators and local businesses struggling with the double hit of bushfires and coronavirus.
He advised Australians in China at the moment to leave sooner than later, with Qantas to suspend flights from the country after February 9.
“People should head the travel advice and not go to mainland China at this point in time,” Mr Dutton said.
NEW MEASURES TO PREVENT CORONAVIRUS SPREAD
 * Foreign travellers who have left or passed through mainland China will be denied entry to Australia as officials try to contain the coronavirus. * They will not be allowed enter Australia for 14 days from the time they depart or transited through the Asian superpower.
* Australian citizens, permanent residents and their immediate family, dependents, legal guardians and spouses, will be excepted from the strict measures.
* This extends to airline staff who have used personal protective gear. * The temporary measure start Saturday and will be reviewed in a fortnight. * Advanced screening and reception arrangements will also be put in place at major airports.
* Australians and exempt individuals arriving out of mainland China, not just the Hubei province, are required to self-isolate for a period of 14 days from the time they leave the country.
*Thermometers and half a million masks will be provided to airports for those coming off flights and those who are interacting these people. * Travel advice for Australians for all of mainland China has been raised to level four, “do not travel”.
* “If you are currently in China, leave as soon as possible by commercial means. Many airlines have temporarily reduced or stopped flights,” Smart Traveller says on its website.
* Qantas will halt its two direct services to mainland China, saying entry restrictions imposed the United States, Singapore and other countries will impact crews working across the airline’s international network.
“If people are leaving Australia to go to China today against the advice then they’re putting themselves in a difficult position.
“The very strong advice from the Federal Government is please, do not travel, let us assess this over the next 14 days.”
While the Morrison Government is negotiating with Chinese authorities to evacuate Australians trapped within the locked-down city of Wuhan, where the coronavirus originated, he warned more assisted flights home may not be able to go ahead.
Meanwhile he took an extraordinary swipe at Ms Palaszczuk accusing her of “appalling” conduct.
“Yesterday, after she’d had a briefing from her medical officer, about (coronavirus travel bans), went out smugly calling for the Federal Government to act in relation to flights from China,” Mr Dutton said.
Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk has been accused of breaking confidence with the chief medical officers meeting. Picture: AAP/Image Sarah Marshall
“No other Premier broke the confidence of the chief medical officers meeting, except Annastacia Palaszczuk for her own political purposes.
“I thought it was an absolutely disgraceful act yesterday and it undermined the confidence within that committee and she’s got a lot of questions to answer for.”
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said while the virus was serious, Australians should not to panic.
“It’s a very serious virus, but Australians should not panic. We should support the Australian-Chinese community, and we should know that as a Government, as a country, we are very well prepared,” Mr Frydenberg told the ABC.
CANCELLED CHINA FLIGHTS AMID CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK
- AIR CANADA Air Canada said on January 28 it was cancelling select flights to China. 
 
- AIR FRANCE Air France said on January 30 it suspended all scheduled flights to and from mainland China until February 9.
 
- AIR INDIA Air India said it was cancelling its Mumbai-Delhi-Shanghai flight from January 31 to February 14.
 
- AIR NEW ZEALAND Air New Zealand said on February 1 it will suspend its Auckland-Shanghai service from February 9 to March 29 due to travel restrictions affecting crew and a decline in forward bookings.
 
- AIR SEOUL South Korean budget carrier Air Seoul said on January 28 it had suspended all flights to China.
 
- AIR TANZANIA Tanzania’s state-owned carrier said it would postpone  its maiden flights to China. It had planned to  begin charter flights to China in February. 
 
- AMERICAN AIRLINES American Airlines said it will cancel flights to Beijing and Shanghai starting January 31, and  run through March 27, though it will continue to fly to Hong Kong.
 
- BRITISH AIRWAYS BA said on January 30 it had cancelled all flights to mainland China for a month.
 
- CATHAY PACIFIC AIRWAYS Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific said it would  progressively reduce capacity to and from mainland China by 50 per cent or more  from January 30 to the end of March. 
 
- DELTA AIR LINES Delta Air Lines accelerated  earlier announced suspensions: the last China-bound flights will leave on February 1, and the last returning  flights from China will leave China on February  2.
 
- EGYPTAIR Egypt’s flag carrier said on January 30 it would suspend  all flights to and from China starting February  1.
 
- EL AL ISRAEL AIRLINES El Al Israel Airlines said on January 30 it  was suspending flights to Beijing until March 25.  Israel’s Health Ministry said it will not allow flights from China to land at its airports.
 
- ETHIOPIAN AIRLINES The African carrier on January 30 denied reports  it had suspended all flights to China. The  airline’s statement contradicted its passenger call centre, which told Reuters  earlier in the day that flights to China had been  suspended. 
 
- ETIHAD AIRWAYS Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways said passenger flights between Beijing and Nagoya, in Japan, had been  temporarily suspended due to low travel demand. 
 
- FINNAIR Finland’s Finnair said  it was cancelling all flights to mainland China  between February 6 and February 29 and to Guangzhou between February 5 and March  29. 
 
- HAINAN AIRLINES China’s Hainan Airlines suspended its flights between Budapest, Hungary, and Chongqing from  February 7 until March 27, Budapest Airport said on its Facebook page. 
 
- KENYA AIRWAYS Kenya Airways said on January 31 it has suspended all  flights to China until further notice. 
 
- LION AIR Indonesia’s Lion Air Group said on January 29 it would  suspend all flights to China from February. The  airline has suspended six flights from several  Indonesian cities to China so far and will suspend the rest next month. LOT  POLISH AIRLINES Polish carrier LOT said it had decided to temporarily suspend  its flights to Beijing until February 9. 
 
- LUFTHANSA Germany’s Lufthansa said on January 29 it was suspending  Lufthansa, Swiss and Austrian Airlines flights to  and from China until February 9. The airline continues to fly to Hong Kong, but  it will stop taking bookings for flights to  mainland China until the end of February. 
 
- PHILIPPINES AIRLINES Philippine Airlines said it would cut the  number of flights between Manila and China by more  than 50 per cent, starting this month. It would continue to serve Filipinos and  Chinese nationals returning from the Lunar New Year holidays. QANTAS AIRWAYS  Qantas said on February 1 it was suspending direct flights to mainland China. The Australian national  carrier’s direct flights from Sydney to Beijing  and Sydney to Shanghai will be halted from February 9 until March 29. 
 
- QATAR  AIRWAYS Qatar Airways said on February 1 it will suspend flights to mainland China from Monday until further  notice. 
 
- ROYAL AIR MAROC Moroccan airline Royal Air Maroc (RAM) has  temporarily suspended its direct flights to China,  the company said on January 30. RAM had on January 16 launched a direct air  route with three flights weekly between its  Casablanca hub and Beijing. 
 
- RUSSIA All Russian airlines, with the exception of national airline  Aeroflot, will stop flying to China, Deputy Prime Minister Tatiana Golikova  said. 
 
- RWANDAIR Rwanda carrier RwandAir has halted flights to and from China until further notice, the  airline said in a statement on Friday. The decision will be reviewed later in  February, it said. 
 
- SAS Nordic airline SAS said on January 30 it has decided to suspend  all flights to and from Shanghai and Beijing from  January 31 until February 9. 
 
- SCOOT Singapore airline Scoot said it was  suspending all flights between Singapore and China  from February 8, media reported. 
 
- SHANGHAI AIRLINES Shanghai Airlines said on January 31 it would  suspend its Chengdu-Budapest flight between February 4 and March 28 and its  Xi’an-Budapest flight between February 6 and March 26 according to a statement  on the website of the Budapest Airport operator. The airline’s Shanghai-Budapest flight is unaffected. 
 
- SINGAPORE AIRLINES Singapore Airlines Ltd said on January 31 it  would reduce capacity on some of its routes to mainland China in February. The cuts include flights to Beijing,  Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Xiamen and Chongqing, some of which are  flown by regional arm SilkAir. Its budget carrier Scoot is also cutting back on  flights to China. 
 
- TURKISH AIRLINES Turkey’s flag  carrier said on January 30 it would decrease frequency on scheduled flights to Beijing, Guangzhou, Shanghai and Xian between  February 5 and February 29.
 
- TURKMENISTAN AIRLINES Turkmenistan Airlines, the Central Asian  nation’s state carrier, said on February 1 it had suspended flights to and from Beijing.
 
- UNITED AIRLINES Chicago-based United announced cancellations,  saying last flights out of mainland China will be  February 5, running through March 28. United had previously suspended 24 US  flights to Beijing, Hong Kong and Shanghai between  February 1 and February 8 because of a significant drop in demand. 
 
- UNITED PARCEL SERVICE UPS has cancelled 22 China flights, as a  result of the Wuhan quarantines and normal manufacturing closures due to the  Lunar New Year holiday, UPS Chief Executive David Abney said on January 30. He  did not specify how many flights cancellations  were due to the virus.
 
- VIETJET Vietnam’s Vietjet will suspend all flights to and from China from February 1, the company  said on January 31. Vietnam Airlines will suspend some flights to China.
 
- VIETNAM AIRLINES Vietnam Airlines will suspend its flights to destinations in China next week over coronavirus concerns, the company said on Friday.
 
- VIRGIN ATLANTIC Virgin Atlantic said on January 30 it would suspend  its daily operations to Shanghai for two weeks from February 2. It cited  declining demand for flights and the safety of its  customers and staff.
 
*Source: Reuters
He said the evacuation of Australians in Wuhan had not received permission from China yet, but he believed approval was imminent.
But the government has been sending mixed messages on whether the evacuees will be charged.
Mr Dutton said they would have to pay about $1000 to cover the cost of the flights, but Mr Frydenberg insisted it would be provided free of charge.
“We won’t be charging the people to come to Australia without a cost … it’s very clear that the advice that we got originally was incorrect,” Mr Frydenberg said.