Many countries suspend UK flights, Australia does not follow suit, questioning claims of variant strains of the virus

A number of countries are banning flights and passengers from the United Kingdom, but Australian officials said today that Australia will not join the ban on flights and questioned the notion that the recent upsurge in infections in the United Kingdom is only due to a mutated strain of the virus.

The company’s main business is to promote the development of the company’s products and services.

The government’s decision to ban the use of the “new” technology is a major step forward in the development of the new technology.

Australia is still a member of the Greater Britain Association, with the Queen as its head of state.

With London warning that the spread of a new and seemingly more contagious strain of the virus is “out of control,” some allied states have begun banning airplanes, trains and boats from Britain. But Australia’s acting chief medical officer, Paul Kelly, has insisted that arrivals from Britain “pose no threat” to the Australian public because, like almost everyone else, they are subject to a strict 14-day quarantine upon entry.

Kelly was also unconvinced by London’s belief that the recent spike in infections was due to a new strain of super virus. I think we need to look at the whole picture”, he said, adding that since the novel coronavirus (CCP virus) was first discovered, “thousands of mutant strains are known to have emerged” and “there is no clear evidence of a significant mutation at the moment”.