The Guardian Australia

Irish government rejects return to full coronaviru­s lockdown

- Lisa O'Carroll

The Irish government has rejected a recommenda­tion to return the country to a full lockdown in the first clash with health chiefs since the Covid outbreak began.

The surprise recommenda­tion by the National Public Health Emergency Team (NPHET) late on Sunday to impose the highest of five levels of restrictio­ns possible with immediate effect had led to sharp criticism from some of the country’s most senior politician­s, including the former taoiseach Leo Varadkar.

While the rising spread of the virus is causing alarm and has led to partial lockdowns in several counties, most of the country is still on level 2 restrictio­ns, involving fewer limits to social and economic activity.

Ministers faced opposition from politician­s and business to what would have amounted to Europe’s first major second-wave national lockdown.

On Monday night, the cabinet opted to move the country to level 3 from midnight on Tuesday. This involves a ban on visits to houses by more than one other household and no more than six people, restrictio­ns to restaurant­s and pubs, most of which remain open, no outdoor events, no matches or events unless elite sports and weddings restricted to 25 people.

The taoiseach, Micheál Martin, said central to discussion­s about moving to level 5 was looking at the wider implicatio­ns for the economy.

“What happens next is in our own hands,” Martin said in a televised address, saying some businesses may not be able to recover from a disproport­ionate reimpositi­on of more severe restrictio­ns. “It’s about protecting lives and livelihood­s.”

Varadkar, who is now the deputy prime minister with responsibi­lity for jobs, went further, telling RTÉ on Monday night that NPHET’s level 5 recommenda­tion “hadn’t been thought through and there hadn’t been prior consultati­on”.

His was also critical of how NPHET has acted, saying “landing something on a Sunday night … without prior consultati­on” was not the right way to do things.

The decision will be debated in the

Dáil on Tuesday and is expected to prompt clashes with the main opposition party, Sinn Féin, led by Mary Lou McDonald.

Varakdar said a move from level 2 to level 5 would have amounted to an “experiment” not tried elsewhere in Europe and that the body in charge of Ireland’s hospitals disagreed with the health chiefs’ capacity concerns.

The Irish Times said the decision had meant “the relationsh­ip between the government and NPHET has been fundamenta­lly reset”.

As the fallout from the breakdown in the relationsh­ip with medical chiefs was beginning to hit, the government minister Thomas Byrne said on RTE radio on Tuesday morning that moving to level 5 would have created financial difficulti­es.

He said Varadkar has been “typically blunt” but he had “absolute confidence” in the chief medical officer, Tony Holohan.

Daniel McConnell, the political editor of the Irish Examiner, wrote that Varadkar “didn’t just throw Dr Holohan under the bus, he reversed the bus over him again and again”.

Developmen­ts in Ireland will be watched closely all over Europe, where continuing collaborat­ion between government and medical chiefs is central to the response to a second wave of the pandemic.

The decision is a significan­t departure for the Irish government, which has largely followed public health guidance over the infection, enacting some of the strictest internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns in the EU.

It may leave the faltering coalition government, inaugurate­d in June, vulnerable to criticism if the less stringent restrictio­ns do not turn back the pandemic and cases continue to

mount.

Under level 5 restrictio­ns, people would have been asked to stay at home, except to exercise within three miles (5km), with only essential retailers allowed to stay open – broadly similar to the initial seven-week lockdown, which was among the longest imposed in Europe.

All indoor restaurant dining is banned under level 3, which has applied in the capital, Dublin, and the north-west county of Donegal for the past two weeks. Pubs can serve a limited number of customers outdoors with the exception of Dublin, where bars that only serve drinks have yet to be allowed to reopen.

Those tighter local restrictio­ns have kept the unemployme­nt rate just below 15%.

While Ireland reported the highest number of daily cases since late April on Saturday and a similar number on Monday, its 14-day cumulative case total of 104 per 100,000 people is only the 14th highest infection rate among 31 European countries monitored by the European Centre for Disease Control.

But a health official who advised a lockdown said that with one of the lowest intensive-care unit (ICU) capacities among the advanced economies of the OECD, Ireland may run out of ICU beds in a month on the current trajectory.

 ?? Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP/Getty Images ?? A waiter serves customers at a pub in Dublin last month.
Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP/Getty Images A waiter serves customers at a pub in Dublin last month.

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