The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine­s eases virus lockdown in capital despite WHO warning

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THE Philippine­s will ease coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in the capital Manila to spur economic activity, officials said on September 14, despite record infection numbers and a warning from the UN health body against the move.

Restaurant­s, churches and beauty salons in the national capital region will open at lower capacities from September 16 to get tens of thousands more people back to work.

“We should strive for total health and this can only be realised by carefully balancing our Covid-19 response by considerin­g both the health of our people and the economic health of the nation,” President Rodrigo Duterte’s spokesman Harry Roque said.

Virus cases have surged to record levels – more than 140,000 cases in the past week – thanks to an outbreak of the highly contagious Delta variant.

The World Health Organisati­on’s (WHO) representa­tive in the Philippine­s on September 14 warned against relaxing curbs.

While six of 10 adults in the capital are fully inoculated, “this is not adequate at this point to relax quarantine positions”, the WHO’s

official in the Philippine­s, Rabindra Abeyasingh­e, told government television.

“If there is a further increase in the current transmissi­on levels, it could lead to an overwhelmi­ng of the hospital systems, that’s why we need to be very careful in calibratin­g how we respond to the current situation,” he said.

The metropolis of 13 million will be placed on the second-highest alert under

a new classifica­tion system that replaces guidelines which left many residents and business owners confused about which activities were allowed.

Localised lockdowns targeting specific buildings, streets or neighbourh­oods will be enforced to check the spread of the virus, replacing the current scheme that covers entire cities and regions.

Fully vaccinated customers

in the capital region can now be served indoors in restaurant­s and beauty salons at up to 10 per cent capacity, and at outdoor venues at up to 30 per cent capacity regardless of vaccinatio­n status.

Churches will also be allowed to seat 10 per cent of their capacity for services but other indoor group activities, including those that lead to crowding, remain banned.

A succession of shutdowns since the start of the pandemic has sidelined more than two million workers in the food and leisure sectors in the capital alone, according to Secretary of Trade Ramon Lopez.

Millions of children started a second year of remote lessons this week in the Philippine­s, which has kept schools closed since the start of the pandemic.

Officials on September 14 said that when the alert level is reduced to the second lowest, classrooms may reopen alongside indoor entertainm­ent and social events at up to 50 per cent capacity.

Duterte has previously said the country cannot afford more lockdowns.

But authoritie­s have had few options to slow the spread of the virus as hospitals have filled up and the nationwide vaccinatio­n rate remains low at 22 per cent.

The president said in a pre-recorded television address aired on September 14 that vaccinatio­ns – now limited to priority sectors – could start for the general adult population next month “if there is a stable vaccine supply”.

The coronaviru­s has infected more than 2.2 million people and killed more than 35,000 in the country.

 ?? AFP ?? A succession of lockdowns has sidelined millions of workers in Philippine capital Manila.
AFP A succession of lockdowns has sidelined millions of workers in Philippine capital Manila.

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