Western Australia has received its first repatriation flight from India amid concerns about a fresh COVID-19 hotel quarantine breach.
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The flight arrived from New Delhi on Wednesday, carrying 134 passengers. They have been transferred to Perth's Westin Hotel where they will spend 14 days in quarantine.
"We're obviously doing our best to make sure it's as absolutely watertight and safe as possible," Premier Mark McGowan told reporters.
Authorities on Tuesday revealed a returned traveller at the Pan Pacific Hotel had been infected by a neighbouring guest.
Genome testing confirmed two men in adjoining rooms at the end of a corridor had the same strain of the virus.
It comes just a month after a security guard was infected while working at the Pan Pacific and passed the virus onto two of his housemates.
The guard is believed to have been infected through contact with a luggage trolley which had been touched by an infected guest.
It's not yet known how the virus spread in the latest hotel-acquired case.
A review of ventilation at Perth's quarantine hotels had classed the Pan Pacific, which has negative pressure rooms, as "low-risk".
"It just goes to show that hotel quarantine was not built for these purposes," Mr McGowan said.
"A viable plan has been put forward for (travellers to quarantine on) Christmas Island by us and the Commonwealth has rejected it."
A hard border to Victoria remains in place as the state grapples with a significant outbreak.
WA has also classified parts of NSW as exposure sites after it emerged a person from Melbourne visited the South Coast while infectious.
Anyone who travels to WA after having visited those sites must quarantine and get tested.
Twelve guests staying on the same floor as the latest hotel-acquired cases have left quarantine after returning negative day 13 tests.
They will be retested three and seven days after leaving.
Authorities say they were some distance away from the confirmed cases and are unlikely to have themselves been infected.
All security guards who worked on the floor during the period of infection have tested negative in the last four days and all are vaccinated.
One of the infected men had arrived at the hotel on May 21 from Colombia via the United States. He tested positive two days later.
The man staying next door had been in the hotel since May 16 and returned two negative tests before testing positive on day 13.
A family of three staying opposite one of the men remain in quarantine and have been moved to a room further away.
All have tested negative and are asymptomatic.
Opposition Leader Mia Davies said the breach showed the McGowan government had failed to provide proper safeguards for hotel quarantine.
The Allegra bulk vessel has meanwhile departed Kwinana Port and is on its way to Singapore.
A crew member who entered hotel quarantine after testing positive is now considered to be a historical case and is on board the vessel.
Australian Associated Press