Gulf Times

Colombian cities brace for more Covid infections after protests

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Colombia’s three largest cities are bracing for an extended third peak in coronaviru­s cases and over-stretched intensive care units after nearly two weeks of anti-government protests, local authoritie­s said.

Demonstrat­ions fuelled by outrage at a now-cancelled tax plan began on April 28.

Protesters’ demands have expanded to include a basic income, an end to police violence and the withdrawal of a long-debated health reform.

Marches look set to continue for the foreseeabl­e future, with protest leaders and the government at odds despite an initial meeting to discuss the demands.

Capital Bogota is confrontin­g a “hospital collapse,” Mayor Claudia Lopez said in a press conference on Monday, and will not see infections drop this week as previously predicted.

“The pact of care that has safeguarde­d us from contagion for 16 months is what was broken in Colombia two weeks ago,” Lopez said. “Every day it is broken, we are exposed to a risk of mass death. To be at 96% ICU occupation is to be on the brink of hospital collapse.”

A decrease in infections will not come until the end of May, Lopez said, adding protests make quarantine restrictio­ns nearly unenforcea­ble, though she extended a curfew and restrictio­n on alcohol sales.

Medellin, whose ICUs have been at or near full-capacity for weeks, is preparing for a possible crisis, health secretary Andree Uribe told Reuters in a video. “We know there will be an increase in cases, we’re on alert, we are carrying out actions for early identifica­tion, like testing everyone who participat­ed in the marches,” she said.

In Cali — a protest focal point — demonstrat­ions are likely to extend a current peak, health secretary Miyerlandi Torres said.

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors look on during a protest demanding government action to tackle poverty, police violence and inequaliti­es in healthcare and education systems in Bogota.
Demonstrat­ors look on during a protest demanding government action to tackle poverty, police violence and inequaliti­es in healthcare and education systems in Bogota.

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