Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte warned of a second lockdown should new coronavirus disease cases spike before the country gets its first vaccines in May.
The president has approved new measures on Saturday to slow the spread of new, more infectious COVID-19 variants as countries around the world closed borders to flights from Britain and South Africa where more infectious variants have been detected.
Duterte extended an existing a ban on flights from Britain by two weeks to mid-January, and said the Philippines would impose travel curbs on countries with local community transmission of the UK variant.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson previously announced stricter restrictions in his country after experts found a more infectious strain of the coronavirus, which, he said, “maybe up to 70 percent more transmissible than the earlier strain.”
With more than 469,000 infections and 9,067 deaths, the Philippines has the second highest number of COVID-19 cases and casualties in Southeast Asia, next to Indonesia.
In an emergency meeting with health experts and government officials, Duterte ordered a 14-day quarantine for passengers who have come from or transited through Britain, and from countries where the more infectious COVID-19 variant was detected, including Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia and Japan.
Duterte pledged free vaccines for the country’s 108 million population, with shipments and inoculation to start in May.
“If (in the meantime) severity in numbers would demand that we take corrective measures immediately, then we should just have to go back to lockdown,” he said.
“[A] lockdown is a possibility,” said the president. “It depends on the severity in number …. When there are many infections, we do not have the antidote on how to kill those variants,” said Duterte.
In mid-March, the Philippines imposed one of the world’s longest and toughest coronavirus lockdowns, which were gradually relaxed in June to allow a slow reopening of the economy.
The Philippines is in talks to acquire around 80 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines, including from Pfizer Inc, Moderna and Britain’s AstraZeneca, as well as Johnson & Johnson, India’s Novavax Inc, China’s Sinovac and Russia’s Gamaleya Institute. – with a report from Reuters
Source: Licas Philippines
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