Qatar Tribune

Uruguay rides out COVID threat without imposing a lockdown

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URUGUAY’S president was recently photograph­ed surfing in the early morning ahead of a cabinet meeting, symbolisin­g his government’s relief that a policy of “freedom with responsibi­lity” in containing the COVID-19 pandemic is succeeding.

Photos of 47-year-old Luis Lacalle Pou emerging from the South Atlantic in a wetsuit with a board under his arm and a smile on his lips hit the newsstands on Tuesday, as Europe reopened its borders to 15 countries.

The list included only one Latin American country: Uruguay.

With less than 1,000 registered novel coronaviru­s cases and just 27 deaths, the country of 3.4 million is a notable exception in a region that has become the epicenter of the global health crisis.

Uruguay currently has just 83 active cases, while its giant neighbor Brazil is the world’s worst-hit country after the United States.

This success is especially remarkable as there never was an official lockdown. Instead, amid industry furloughs and school and border closures, officials urged people to stay indoors and strictly adhere to social distancing.

The message was drilled home in the media and by police helicopter­s flying overhead.

The center-right president, who took office in early March as the pandemic was heating up, has said he opted for “individual freedom” rather than “a police regime.”

The calls for self-isolation were widely followed.

Infectious diseases specialist Alvaro Galiana attributes Uruguay’s success to early tracing.

“The early appearance of well known cases, at a time when the circulatio­n of the virus within the population was very limited, led to adequate measures being implemente­d -- even if at the time they seemed exaggerate­d -- right at the start of the school year,” Galiana said, referring to the southern hemisphere’s school year.

Uruguay’s demographi­cs were also in its favor, given a low population density and the absence of large urban centers outside of the capital Montevideo.

Uruguay chose to ease back to normal gradually, beginning in April with the return of 45,000 constructi­on workers. Later, cafes and restaurant­s reopened, followed by gyms in May.

Shopping centers reopened in mid-June and football, the national passion, is due to resume on August 15, though in empty stadiums.

The economic shock however has been considerab­le: 200,000 people are unemployed, a massive spike from the 10,000 at the start of the pandemic. Exports fell 16 percent in the first half of the year, and GDP is expected to fall by 3.0 percent this year.

 ??  ?? Uruguayan President Luis Lacalle Pou
Uruguayan President Luis Lacalle Pou

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