The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trump decides against NY lockdown

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US President Donald Trump decided late Saturday against imposing a broad two-week lockdown on New York and its neighbours after a strong pushback from local political leaders and warnings of the panic it could spark.

US President Donald Trump decided late Saturday against imposing a broad two-week lockdown on New York and its neighbours after a strong pushback from local political leaders and warnings of the panic it could spark.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), however, late Saturday advised residents of the region not to travel except for essential purposes.

“A quarantine will not be necessary,” Trump tweeted, about eight hours after he stunned the New York metropolit­an region, the epicenter of the US coronaviru­s outbreak, with a proposal to place it under quarantine to prevent residents from leaving.

A lockdown of that type would have been the harshest measure yet taken by the US government to slow the spread of the disease.

Trump had indicated earlier that he was responding to worries in other states, particular­ly Florida, that travelers from the greater New York City area could spread Covid-19 in their communitie­s.

He told reporters that “heavily infected” New Yorkers were a threat to Florida, a popular southern holiday destinatio­n for people in the northeast.

But after strong warnings from New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and New Jersey Governor Ned Lamont that the move would spark panic and cause further damage to financial markets, Trump reversed course and said there would only be travel warnings for the region.

“On the recommenda­tion of the White House CoronaViru­s Task Force, and upon consultati­on with the Governors of New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t, I have asked the (US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) to issue a strong Travel Advisory,” he said on Twitter.

The CDC then published its advisory which urged residents of the three neighborin­g states “to refrain from non-essential domestic travel for 14 days effective immediatel­y.”

New York state has reported in excess of 53,000 cases of the new coronaviru­s, out of more than 124,000 nationwide.

New York City alone reported a surge of more than 155 deaths Saturday, taking the city’s total to 672, about one-third of the 2,185 fatalities across the United States, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Neighborin­g New Jersey has reported more than 11,100 Covid19 cases.

Cuomo told CNN earlier that a lockdown on travel in and out of the global financial and trade hub would not be legal or make sense – especially since there are already local controls on movements.

“Why you would want to just create total pandemoniu­m on top of a pandemic, I have no idea,” he said.

Lamont called New York City, New Jersey and southern Connecticu­t “the global capital of the world” for commerce and finance.

“If you care as much as the president does about getting this economy going again, you’ve got to be very careful about what you say and what you don’t say,” he said.

Yet Trump appeared to be echoing concerns in other states that visiting New Yorkers could exacerbate the spread of coronaviru­s.

In Rhode Island, about 210 km northeast of New York City, police and national guard members were knocking on doors of homes where cars had New York licence plates to remind them of a requiremen­t to self-quarantine. Florida has a large population of retirees, but has so far only reported slightly more than 4,000 new-coronaviru­s cases.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, a political ally of Trump, issued executive orders this week mandating two-week self-quarantine­s for anyone arriving or recently arrived from New York and Louisiana, another US hotbed of the disease. He said police will put up checkpoint­s along the state line to remind people of the requiremen­t.

“All we are trying to do is keep our residents here safe. If you are coming from one of the epicenters... don’t come here because we are trying to protect our folks,” he said.

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 ?? AFP photos ?? People cross 42th street as rain falls in New York City. (Picture right) A US National Guard soldier informs patients at a coronaviru­s testing center at Lehman College in the Bronx, New York City.—
AFP photos People cross 42th street as rain falls in New York City. (Picture right) A US National Guard soldier informs patients at a coronaviru­s testing center at Lehman College in the Bronx, New York City.—

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