The Scotsman

Return to lockdown as world looks to stop virus resurgence

● Restrictio­ns return in several countries as virus cases surge anew

- By ROD MCGUIRK

Lifted lockdowns are being reimposed, shutting businesses and curbing people’s social lives again, as communitie­s around the world try to stop a resurgence of coronaviru­s before it spins out of control.

Residents of Australia’s second-largest city were warned yesterday to comply with lockdown regulation­s or face tougher restrictio­ns. Melbourne’s five million people and part of the city’s semirural suburbs are a week into a new, six-week lockdown to contain a fresh outbreak there.

“The time for warnings, the time for cutting people slack is over,” Victoria state premier Daniel Andrews said. “Where we are is in a very serious and deadly position.”

In the US, the worst-hit country in the world with 3.4 million cases, places including

Washington state are delaying timetables for reopening their economies.

Governor Jay Inslee warned there was a “significan­t risk” that parts of the economy may have to be closed again if coronaviru­s activity continues to climb.

Renewed restrictio­ns also took effect in Hong Kong yesterday, with public gatherings limited to four people, restaurant­s limited to takeaway after 6pm, and a one-week closure for gyms, karaoke bars, and selected other businesses.

Wearing face masks is also mandatory on public transport for the first time, with the non-compliant being fined.

Some countries, including South Korea, have weathered the pandemic without severe economic lockdowns, although officials in the country shut schools until May and temporaril­y closed leisure facilities in some major cities when infections rose.

Instead of stringent social restrictio­ns, the country is attempting to contain its outbreak by mobilising technologi­cal tools to trace contacts and enforce quarantine­s.

But health authoritie­s in recent weeks have said they are finding it increasing­ly difficult to trace contacts and predict infection routes as people increasing­ly venture out in the public.

Business shutdowns were not enforced during Japan’s state of emergency that ended in late May, but recent spikes in Tokyo and other major cities have prompted local government­s to take action.

About 100 infections on US military bases on the southern island of Okinawa prompted governor Denny Tamaki to demand the US military seal off the affected bases.

The US military said the affected bases have been placed under a lockdown. Defence minister Taro Kono said “a number of problems” have been found in the US military’s coronaviru­s handling.

In Tokyo, officials have largely identified night-time entertainm­ent districts as hotbeds of the recent rises in Covid-19 cases and said shutdown requests were possible.

Israel moved last week to reimpose restrictio­ns, closing events spaces, live show venues, bars and clubs. It has imposed lockdowns on areas with high infection rates, which in some cases sparked protests from residents.

Officials have warned that if case numbers do not come down in the coming days, Israel will have no choice but to lock the entire country down again, as it did in the spring.

“I don’t see what other tools we have aside from a lockdown,” Israeli health minister Yuli Edelstein told the Israeli news site Ynet. “Unless there is a miracle.”

Meanwhile, of the nearly two dozen possible Covid-19 vaccines in progress, candidates from the US, China and Britain are entering final testing stages.

The first one tested in the US revved up people’s immune systems just the way scientists had hoped, researcher­s reported earlier this week, as they are poised to begin key final testing.

Coronaviru­s has seen more than 13.3 million people have been infected worldwide, and 578,000 have died.

 ?? PICTURE: AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? 0 Face masks are now mandatory on public transport in Hong Kong, including the metro, as the city experience­s a spike in coronaviru­s cases
PICTURE: AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES 0 Face masks are now mandatory on public transport in Hong Kong, including the metro, as the city experience­s a spike in coronaviru­s cases
 ??  ?? 0 Restrictio­ns have been lifted in Florida, but cases are surging
0 Restrictio­ns have been lifted in Florida, but cases are surging

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