Malta Independent

‘In hindsight, we possibly opened too fast’ – Tony Zahra

- KARL AZZOPARDI

In hindsight, Malta possibly reopened too fast, President of the Malta Hotels and Restaurant­s Associatio­n (MHRA) Tony Zahra told The Malta Independen­t.

Over the past week Malta saw a spike in new COVID-19 cases which caused several countries to rethink Malta’s position as a safe destinatio­n.

This includes Lativa a couple of days ago which added selfquaran­tine requiremen­ts and Lithuania which blackliste­d Malta yesterday. There is also speculatio­n that Ireland could follow as reported by its local media.

This newsroom spoke with MHRA President Zahra to see how this will impact the hospitalit­y industry.

Zahra seemed quite confident that Lithuania would not pose that much of a problem since, from his recollecti­on, flights for Kaunas (the city in which flights towards Malta operate) were not operating this year.

“So obviously if there are no direct flights, the effect will be minimal. However, it is never a good sign that Malta is put on anyone’s blacklist.”

He explained that one of his main concerns is adding the COVID-19 positive migrant cases to the overall total of Malta’s active cases, arguing that it gives off the wrong impression.

“Adding the 65 cases out of the 94 that were allowed to disembark to the overall number of positive cases does not give a good indication of the real amount of cases that Malta has active,” he believes.

With regards to Ireland, he said that this situation would definitely affect Malta but “let’s cross that bridge when we get to it.”

Zahra said that the situation is what it is; it is fluid everywhere and there is no manual

“The question is, should we have opened so fast or not? With hindsight, we might have opened a little bit too fast.”

based on past events which authoritie­s can use for future events. This is a huge and new problem for everybody, he said, using the redundanci­es that HSBC bank will be enacting worldwide as an example.

“The situation is very fluid; we have to manage it with a cool head knowing the risks that the situation poses for both health and the economy.”

Asked whether mass events should not have been allowed in the first place considerin­g that they were one of the main causes for the recent spike in COVID-19 cases, he said: “hindsight gives everyone 20/20 vision.”

“The question is, should we have opened so fast or not? With hindsight, we might have opened a little bit too fast. Unfortunat­ely, when making decisions on the future, you can’t just rely on hindsight; you have to make decisions based on what is known at the time,” he concluded.

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