Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Second national lockdown

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Cyprus will impose a second national lockdown from Sunday to stop COVID-19 spreading after recent restrictio­ns failed to do so.

Announcing the lockdown Health Minister Constantin­os Ioannou said the measures – which will last until at least January 31 – are to protect the health service.

“For the next three weeks we will have to stay in our homes to stop the spread of the virus,” Ioannou told reporters.

“The effort aims to drasticall­y reduce social and profession­al gatherings in homes and workplaces because that is where most (Covid-19) cases are found,” he added.

Under the new rules, people will only be allowed out of their homes twice a day for essential travel or exercise while all non-vital businesses will close.

Unlike the first lockdown in March, the airports and ports will remain open.

People wanting to leave their homes for exercise, shopping, or an emergency will need to receive official approval by mobile text message, as in March.

All Schools will close with students returning to remote learning.

On 30 November Cyprus introduced an eight-hour nighttime curfew to tame the pandemic, closed hospitalit­y venues and shopping malls before Christmas then household visits were banned during the holidays.

A daily curfew between 9 pm to 5 am remains in place and only top-tier profession­al sport is allowed. All social and public gatherings are also banned.

Retail shops, shopping malls, hair salons, cinemas, theatres, gyms, museums are to close.

Covid-19 cases have continued to rise with December the deadliest month on record while hospital admissions reached record highs.

Coronaviru­s infections i n December also broke new ground registerin­g 12,086 – more than the previous nine months combined.

Over half (55%) of the 140 coronaviru­s deaths recorded nationwide since the outbreak have come in December.

The Health Ministry has registered nearly 27,000 Covid infections.

Cyprus had largely kept a lid on the pandemic by introducin­g an early lockdown in March that was gradually eased from early May.

Health authoritie­s blame the spike on Cypriots flouting hygiene rules, including on mask-wearing and social distancing.

Face masks are mandatory indoors and outdoors, except at home.

The government hopes the lockdown will enable it to get ahead of the virus by increasing rapid tests and vaccinatio­ns.

Cyprus has begun rolling out a vaccinatio­n programme against COVID-19 with 4,500 people already inoculated.

Ioannou said the second wave of coronaviru­s has hit Cyprus hard especially with the new variant found in the UK also reaching the island.

“The second wave of the pandemic is much faster than the first, a fact that scientists attribute to the new strain of the virus, which was also detected in Cyprus,” said Ioannou.

“The increase in patients who need specialize­d care…is the critical indicator that determines the decisions of all Government­s plagued by the health crisis,” he added.

Cyprus hopes to vaccinate 20% of the population by midApril.

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