Cook Islands records first case of COVID-19 since the pandemic began

A 10-year-old boy quarantining after arriving on a repatriation flight with his family has tested positive to COVID-19, becoming the first-ever case of the virus in the Pacific nation.

An aerial view of Rarotonga, the largest of the Cook Islands

An aerial view of Rarotonga, the largest of the Cook Islands Source: Moment RF

The Cook Islands on Saturday recorded its first case of COVID-19 since the pandemic began, as the South Pacific country edges toward reopening its borders to tourists.

The nation of around 17,000 people has one of the highest vaccination rates globally, with 96 per cent of the eligible population double-dosed.

The virus was detected in a 10-year-old boy quarantining after arriving on a repatriation flight with his family on Thursday, Prime Minister Mark Brown said in a statement.

The boy was believed to have flown in from New Zealand.
"We have been preparing ourselves for the time we reopen our borders. Our testing regimes have shown the value of that preparation by catching this case at the border," Mr Brown said.

The island nation, which shut itself off from the world when the pandemic hit, has announced plans to resume quarantine-free travel with New Zealand on 14 January.

A short-lived travel bubble with New Zealand was paused earlier this year when an outbreak of the virus emerged in Auckland.


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Published 4 December 2021 2:10pm
Updated 22 February 2022 6:54pm
Source: AFP, SBS


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