 Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison says that his country is no longer not in a hurry to reopen its international borders and risk the country's nearly COVID-19 free life. Australia closed its borders to all non-citizens and non-residents in March 2020 and has been permitting only limited international arrivals in recent months, mainly its citizens returning from abroad. Australia is in no hurry to open those borders, can I assure you? There are three million people now who have died from COVID. The COVID pandemic is raging around the world. I can assure Australians that I will not be putting at risk the way we are living in this country, which is so different to the rest of the world today. The issues of borders and how they're managed will be done very, very carefully and must be done in partnership with the states and territories in terms of how the quarantine program works, public health orders, control what is done with quarantine of returning Australians and residents. And so we will do that in partnership with them. We can take small steps, I think, not ready to take those steps now for Australians to be able to travel and return without hotel quarantine. We're not in that position yet. We're simply doing the planning work, understanding what the health risks are, understanding how that can be successfully done and in a few months from now, well, we'll see where we're at, but we're going to proceed very, very cautiously on those borders.