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Manila sees tighter quarantine rules over surging Omicron infections

Daily Covid-19 cases surged to a two-month high yesterday

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 01 Jan 2022 10:30AM

Manila sees tighter quarantine rules over surging Omicron infections
Manila, the metropolis of 13 million, will be placed on the third-highest level of alert from Monday until January 15, under a new system that aims to balance the need to contain infections with the reopening of the Philippine economy, which has been hit hard by the virus. – Wikipedia pic, January 1, 2022

MANILA – The Philippines will tighten coronavirus restrictions in the capital Manila over fears of an “exponential growth” in cases due to the highly contagious Omicron variant, the government said yesterday. 

The metropolis of 13 million will be placed on the third-highest level of alert from Monday until January 15, under a new system that aims to balance the need to contain infections with the reopening of the Philippine economy, which has been hit hard by the virus.

Restaurants, parks, churches and beauty salons will open at lower capacities to limit mobility, President Rodrigo Duterte’s spokesman Karlo Nograles told a news conference. 

In-person classes and contact sports are suspended, he added, while localised lockdowns targeting specific buildings, streets and neighbourhoods will also be enforced.

Daily infections surged to a two-month high yesterday as the Christmas season and looser restrictions allowed family reunions and church services in the Catholic-majority nation.

“The epidemiological investigation on the three local cases indicates there is a high possibility of local transmission of Omicron,” Nograles said.

“In the coming days, we may see a spike in active cases.”

The health department has warned of a “high probability of exponential growth” of coronavirus infections linked to the Omicron variant.

“We also have to keep our healthcare utilisation at a manageable level. We can do this by working together to prevent the transmission of Covid-19,” Health Secretary Francisco Duque said.

The Philippines has been under its second-lowest alert level since December 3, requiring most indoor venues to operate at 50% capacity and allowing limited in-person classes. – AFP, January 1, 2022

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