Indonesia tightens social restrictions in Jakarta, Bali and 2 other cities as Covid-19 cases surge
JAKARTA - Indonesia is tightening social
restrictions in
Greater Jakarta, Bali, Bandung and Yogyakarta amid a spike in Covid-19
infections driven by the Omicron variant of the coronavirus. The authorities expect the
surge in cases to peak later this month, and the government said on Monday (Feb
7) that the number of people allowed in public places in the four cities will
be restricted. Restaurants, cafes, shopping malls must again limit visitors and
operate at 60 per cent capacity, playgrounds and entertainment centres at 35
per cent capacity, and places of worship at 50 per cent. Mr Luhut
Pandjaitan, the senior minister in charge of coordinating efforts to contain
Covid-19 on the country’s most populous island of Java as well as Bali, said
the government will now look at the ratio of hospital bed occupation and
contact tracing when evaluating if a city required tighter restrictions.
Java and Bali account for 60 per cent of
Indonesia’s more than 270 million population. “Frankly, we do not want people
to get frightened and the economy affected, while in fact the real
problem may not actually be as bad. We are closely monitoring the situation
this week. If things are good, we may ease restrictions next week,” Mr Luhut
told reporters during an online media briefing on Monday. About 65 per cent of
patients in hospital for Covid-19 have no or mild symptoms, he disclosed, adding
that they should instead self-isolate at home or be sent to a designated
isolation facility. Government data shows that currently, 18,966 hospital beds
are occupied by Covid-19 patients, which is less than 20 per cent of the
120,000 set aside for them. Indonesia has a total of about 400,000 hospital
beds nationwide.
Said Health Minister Budi Sadikin, who was
also at the same online media briefing: “It’s important the public
understand that cases will spike. In other countries, Omicron cases are doubled
or tripled that of Delta. What is important is we continue to comply with
health protocols so that hospitalisation and death numbers are low.” Delta
is the more deadly of the two coronavirus variants, but Omicron is far more
transmissible. Indonesia was hit by a Covid-19 wave in early 2021, and
this was followed by a more devastating one, dominated by the
Delta variant in the middle of the year, which saw daily new cases exceed
50,000 at its peak.The second wave pushed hospitals and healthcare workers to
the limit. “Do not panic when seeing high case numbers because what
matters more are hospitalisation and death numbers, which are far lower
and under control,” Mr Budi said. “If patients comply with the Health
Ministry’s directives, the number of hospitalised patients would have been 60
to 70 per cent lower. Hospitals should be only for those who need them,” Mr
Budi later told reporters. Nearly half or 42 per cent of the 356 Covid-19
patients who died since mid-December, when the Omicron variant was first
detected in the country, suffered other underlying conditions. Many of those
who died, or 44 per cent, were elderly and 69 per cent were
either unvaccinated or partially vaccinated.
Mr Budi noted that three regions in Indonesia
have recorded daily cases surpassing their respective peaks during
the Delta wave. Jakarta had 14,600 daily new cases at the peak of the
Delta wave but is reporting 15,800 now. Banten province, which had 3,900 then,
has 4,800 now, and Bali, with 1,900 previously, has 2,000 now. Indonesia is
much better prepared for a third Covid-19 wave, with centralised isolation
centres set up and ample supply of oxygen and medicine, as well as medical
staff. In January, the country received its first shipment of two types of
Covid-19 antiviral pills – molnupiravir made by Merck, and paxlovid by Pfizer –
and is set to start producing locally in April. A telemedicine service in
Jakarta, where patients can consult doctors and get free Covid-19
medicine delivered to their doorstep, will be expanded to
Bandung, Semarang, Solo, Yogyakarta and Denpasar. The world’s fourth-most
populous nation has fully vaccinated 107 million people, with 160 million
partially vaccinated as at the end of 2021.
Source: Thestraittimes (Tuesday,
8 February 2022)
LIST OF VOCABULARY
NO |
ENGLISH |
INDO |
1. |
Tightening |
Mengencangkan |
2. |
Restrictions |
Pembatasan |
3. |
Expect |
Mengharapkan
|
4. |
Worship |
Memuja |
5. |
Affected |
Mempengaruhi |
6. |
Symptoms |
Gejala |
7. |
Comply |
Mematuhi |
8. |
Devastating |
Merusak |
9. |
Elderly |
Tua |
10. |
Peaks |
Puncak |
11. |
Doorstep |
Ambang pintu
|
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