Kathimerini English

Regional travel with self-tests or shots

With May seen as pivotal, government intent on cracking down on any feeling of complacenc­y

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lifting of the ban on interregio­nal movement set for May 15, government spokeswoma­n Aristoteli­a Peloni said yesterday that travel will only be allowed with a negative self-test or vaccinatio­n certificat­e. It has not yet been decided whether proof of one or two doses of the vaccine will be required.

The ultimate goal of these requiremen­ts is to put a brake on the spread of the virus in provincial areas where hospitals are most vulnerable, but also to remind the public that the danger of the coronaviru­s has anything but passed and that the pandemic is still very much among us.

Government sources have also pointed out that Greece is still is in a transition­al stage where social and economic activities coexist with the virus. The month of May, the same sources say, is pivotal and the country simply cannot afford to relapse into lockdown restrictio­ns.

A case in point is the total lockdown on the island of Kalymnos, which shows that the risk of a relapse is very much real.

Nonetheles­s, there is moderate optimism among government officials that the pandemic, even if very slowly, is de-escalating and that from mid-May, in parallel with what has been announced – the opening of tourism and start of interregio­nal movement – there will be a further easing of restrictio­ns.

Something that is being considered, as requested by restaurant­s, is to further shorten the nighttime curfew so that it starts at midnight instead of 11.

This request could be implemente­d as early as this Monday or May 15 in parallel with the opening of tourism, as Developmen­t Minister Adonis Georgiadis said yesterday. At the same time, the system of using text messages for movement is also expected to be scrapped on May 15.

The government’s optimism was also echoed yesterday by Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis himself, who said during a digital conference organized by the Financial Times that the situation will improve significan­tly in May.

“I do expect the situation to improve dramatical­ly over the next months,” he said, stressing that the infection rate and hospital admissions are declining.

He also cited the accelerati­on of vaccinatio­ns and self-tests, noting that the level of 100,000 vaccinatio­ns per day has been exceeded.

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