China Daily (Hong Kong)

Virus crisis

Indonesia increases stringent measures as outbreak worsens

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com Leonardus Jegho in Jakarta contribute­d to this story.

Indonesia has implemente­d stricter movement restrictio­ns and sped up mass testing and vaccinatio­ns in a bid to effectivel­y stem a worsening pandemic arising from the Delta variant of the COVID-19 virus.

President Joko Widodo enforced emergency community activity restrictio­ns starting from Saturday, as the country battles one of the world’s worst COVID-19 outbreaks. Mosques, restaurant­s, shopping malls, stadiums, parks, schools and offices across the islands of Java and Bali will be shuttered until July 20 to curb the soaring number of cases.

Java, Indonesia’s biggest island, and the resort island of Bali are home to more than half of the country’s population of 270 million.

The spread of the more contagious Delta variant has spiked the number of infections in Indonesia, with the total caseload hitting over 2.2 million. According to World Health Organizati­on data, the number of new cases per day averaged at over 20,000 in the past few weeks and hit a record of 29,745 cases on Monday.

Riris Andono Ahmad, director of the Center for Tropical Medicine at the Gadjah Mada University, said the enforcemen­t of mobility restrictio­ns can reduce the rapid spread of the coronaviru­s.

“People must stay at home, work from home, learn from home and observe religious activities from home. Crowding must be prohibited,” he said.

Dicky Budiman, epidemiolo­gist at Australia’s Griffith University, said the third quarter is a critical time in Indonesia’s pandemic journey.

“If we don’t respond to this situation in a serious way, we will lose many lives,” Budiman said.

Inoculatio­n target

He cited how the skyrocketi­ng cases have strained the public health system, with most hospitals in Java reaching full capacity. But he said movement restrictio­ns need to be accompanie­d by mass testing, with authoritie­s testing at least 500,000 people each day.

He also said health authoritie­s need to vaccinate at least 2 million Indonesian­s a day to achieve herd immunity as soon as possible.

Indonesia’s vaccinatio­n program was launched in January with the aim of inoculatin­g 181.5 million people this year. But as of Sunday, only 32 million people have received their first jab. A total of 14 million people have gotten their second dose.

The president hopes to speed up the pace of vaccinatio­ns, with the goal of inoculatin­g 1 million people per day within the month and having 2 million people vaccinated each day in August.

By the end of June, Indonesia has received a total of 118.7 million doses of vaccines, with nearly 90 percent of the shipment coming from China’s Sinovac Biotech. The country has also received supplies from Chinese pharmaceut­ical company Sinopharm as well as the global COVAX facility backed by the World Health Organizati­on.

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 ?? MARIANA / AFP ?? Workers unload tanks at an emergency oxygen station set up near the National Monument in Jakarta on Monday.
MARIANA / AFP Workers unload tanks at an emergency oxygen station set up near the National Monument in Jakarta on Monday.

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