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Chile ordered new quarantine measures for three districts of Santiago

Tuesday, May 5th 2020 - 06:37 UTC
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“If we do not win the battle in Santiago, we can lose the war against the coronavirus,” warned Health Minister Jaime Manalich. “If we do not win the battle in Santiago, we can lose the war against the coronavirus,” warned Health Minister Jaime Manalich.

Chile ordered strict new quarantine measures on three districts in the capital Santiago after a sudden spike in coronavirus cases on Sunday. The health ministry reported a surge of 1,228 new infections, bringing the total to nearly 20,000 nationwide and dealing a blow to hopes it was over the worst of the crisis.

“If we do not win the battle in Santiago, we can lose the war against the coronavirus,” warned Health Minister Jaime Manalich.

Cerillos, Quilicura and Recoleta districts - as well as the northern mining city of Antofagasta - would be quarantined from Tuesday, he said.

Santiago, with a population of seven million, has been the country's main centre of infections, particularly in its three richest suburbs. However, the virus began to spread in the city's more densely populated areas over the past couple of weeks.

The setback follows criticism of the reopening of some commercial streets in Santiago after the government last week outlined “a return plan” for the economy.

The ministry reported 13 new deaths on Sunday, all in the metropolitan area, bringing the total to 260.

Chile has Latin America's highest rate of coronavirus testing - 14,000 a day and nearly 200,000 overall according to officials - and had on Thursday cautiously celebrated evidence infections had peaked.

It was among the first countries to explore the idea of an “immunity passport” for recovered COVID-19 patients to allow people back to work. However, it dropped the measure after the World Health Organization warned there was no certainty the disease could not strike a person twice.

Instead, Chile will provide “discharge cards” to some 10,000 recovered patients. The cards will enable holders to move freely in quarantined areas and to rejoin the workforce.

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