Friends and lovers finally reunited
Shopping and dining out now allowed as country enters phase two of reopening
Friends and lovers reunited as the city-state lifted strict curbs on socialising, shopping and dining out after more than two months of coronavirus lockdown as singapore moved into phase two of its reopening.
Many residents have been forbidden from mixing with those outside their families since early April under measures to contain infections that have passed 41,000 – one of Asia’s highest tallies.
Jerry, 22, and his girlfriend, who had been apart for weeks, were among the first customers queuing for bubble tea at a nearby mall.
“We came early. We wanted to avoid the crowds,” said Jerry, adding that the couple planned to spend the day chilling out and catching up.
A nearby coffee shop serving kaya toast served with runny eggs, was full of masked patrons who had scanned Qr (quick response) codes on their telephones before entering, to help with contact tracing.
some restaurants – previously allowed only to offer takeaways and home deliveries – set up plastic screens between tables while yellow tape kept people apart in long queues outside shops.
in a Facebook post marking the reopening of most businesses, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said: “i am sure all of us have been eagerly looking forward to this day for a long time! But please don’t go overboard celebrating.”
singapore won plaudits for its early containment efforts but after a surge in imported cases and outbreaks in cramped migrant dormitories it enforced one of the world’s strictest lockdowns.
A woman was fined s$5,000 (rM15,340) this week for offences including meeting her boyfriend and not wearing a mask, local media reported.
But there was joy yesterday as friends nattered over tea at hawker centres, or food courts, and parents watched children play on swings and slides that were cordoned off for weeks.
The lockdown is being lifted in stages. in the first, at the start of June, schools resumed.
Gyms, parks and beaches can now reopen but religious congregations, bars, theatres and large-scale events cannot yet.
student Annie Yin, 20, said she felt “liberated” and glad to see friends but a “little bit scared” about a potential coronavirus resurgence.