Fiji Sun

Lockdown! Call for Proper PNG Enforcemen­t

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APapua New Guinea academic says without enforcemen­t of health measures it will be difficult to contain COVID-19.

PNG’s capital has begun a twoweek lockdown after dozens of cases of the virus were confirmed in Port Moresby over recent days.

Yesterday, as the extent of the crisis in Moresby became more clear, the government introduced renewed emergency measures including a night-time curfew and a lockdown during which only essential businesses can operate.

Henry Ivarature from the Australian National University’s Australia Pacific Security College, said that until now, despite government advice that everyone must wear masks in public, there had been little adherence to this and other core health measures. Dr Ivarature, who had been advocating for a lockdown, said measures must be enforced properly.

“You can issue as many pandemic regulation­s as you wish, but if you are not enforcing it on the ground, then you are defeating the whole purpose of protecting your citizens from this virus or any other disease that you want to prevent from spreading across the community.”

Dr Ivarature, who is currently in Port Moresby, was interviewe­d by RNZ Pacific shortly before Prime Minister James Marape announced the two-week lockdown yesterday.

The academic lamented that so far many residents in the capital had not been taking the recommende­d health measures seriously enough. For instance very few people were wearing masks in public, or maintainin­g social distancing, he said.

Furthermor­e, the national habit of chewing betelnut was also continuing unchecked.

“People continue to chew and spit betelnut spittle in public,” he explained.

He said when the pandemic began and the PNG government introduced a State of Emergency in March, it adopted the same sort of defensive strategy that many other countries did, including border closures and restrictio­ns on public movement.

According to him, the country’s security forces did an adequate job of restrictin­g public movement in the early phases of the pandemic.

The weekend surge in COVID-19 cases, taking the country’s total number of confirmed cases past 60, came as PNG’s COVID-19 response team of health officials ramped up testing - there were 535 tests on Sunday alone.

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