 Australia's victorious state authorities say there was still unclear whether a snap one week lockdown to contain a fresh COVID-19 outbreak would end as planned in two days as the state grapples with a growing virus outbreak. Australia's second most populous state was plunged into the lockdown on May 27 after the state reported its first locally transmitted cases in nearly three months early last week. This forces its nearly seven million residents to remain home, except for essential businesses. On Tuesday, nine new locally acquired COVID-19 cases were reported, taking the total infections in the clusters to 54. Tuesday's data includes six cases announced on Monday, May 31, which were recorded after the midnight cut-off deadline. Firstly, I don't know if there's going to be an extension or not. We are in, as the Acting Premier pointed out yesterday, there is every prospect that things might get worse before they get better, and the aged care settings are quite troubling. Yes, we are making significant inroads through our contact tracing, through our support from millions of Victorians who are following the rules and doing the right thing. That is helping all of our processes, but we are not yet in a position to make that call, and as soon as we are, we will be certainly coming out and sharing that with all Victorians. This is the biggest outbreak we've seen in Australia this year. It's certainly the fastest moving outbreak I think we've seen anywhere in Australia for a long time. I'm not taking this one lightly at all. I'm confident that we're doing everything we possibly can to get on top of this, and I'm confident that all of us as Victorians are out there willing this thing to be over and willing us all to get on top of it and by behaving in the right way.