Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Belgium shuts restos

Week after week, the figures are doubling, they’re skyrocketi­ng... it’s an exponentia­l increase

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BRUSSELS, Belgium (AFP) — Belgium on Friday ordered all cafes and restaurant­s to close for four weeks and imposed a curfew as it seeks to tackle a sharp rise in coronaviru­s cases.

Prime Minister Alexander de Croo announced the measures, which come into effect on Monday, after a meeting of the Belgian government’s crisis unit, warning that COVID-19 cases are rising “exponentia­lly.”

With more than 10,300 deaths from a population of 11.5 million, Belgium is one of the worst affected countries in Europe.

“Week after week, the figures are doubling, they’re skyrocketi­ng... it’s an exponentia­l increase,” De Croo told a news conference.

The Brussels city region ordered bars and cafes to close last week, but Friday’s announceme­nt extends the restrictio­n nationwide.

The new nationwide limits announced Friday include a midnight to 5 a.m. curfew — aimed at preventing people hosting parties at home — and a ban on the sale of alcohol after 8 p.m.

Week after week, the figures are doubling, they’re skyrocketi­ng..

Working from home must now “become the norm,” De Croo said, while theaters and cinemas are allowed to stay open provided they respect social distancing.

Deputy prime minister Georges Gilkinet said the decision to close cafes and restaurant­s — deemed high-risk venues for spreading the virus — was taken to try to head off another full lockdown like the one Belgium enforced earlier in the year. He warned “the situation is serious from a health point of view” and we must “prevent our healthcare system from becoming saturated.”

“Our hospitals are clogged,” he added.” The figures are as high as they were in March when we decided on a lockdown, that’s what we absolutely want to avoid.”

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