Dubai Airports CEO Paul Griffiths looks back on how response and recovery operations ran like clockwork to safely take stranded guests to their destinations
Cyprus on Friday announced a two-week partial lockdown as hospitals struggle to cope with surging coronavirus cases, with restrictions covering the key Orthodox Easter holidays.
“The growing number of infections, combined with intense pressure on the health system, cannot leave us indifferent and requires difficult decisions, drastic measures,” Health Minister Constantinos Ioannou told reporters.
The new restrictions, running from April 26 to May 9, mean that people are encouraged to work from home and must seek authorisation for only one non-work-related trip daily.
Non-essential shops will close, and a 9pm to 5am curfew will be imposed, tightening the start time from 11pm.
Restrictions will be slightly eased for Orthodox Easter at the start of May.
After May 9, people wanting to gather — such as in a restaurant — must provide either a negative Covid-19 test result within 72 hours or proof that they have either had their first vaccine jab or have contracted the virus within the past three months.
Ioannou said the measures would help the Mediterranean island’s vaccination rollout play catch up and ease pressure on hospitals, witnessing record patient admissions.
“We are in a very difficult phase of the pandemic,” Ioannou said.
Cyprus is facing a third wave of Covid-19 infections fuelled by the more contagious British variant, with daily cases peaking at a record 941 on Tuesday.
Cyprus detected 668 new cases per 100,000 people over the seven days to April 22 — the highest population-adjusted rate of any country in the world, AFP’s database shows.
Uruguay was second highest worldwide on this measure, with 558 detected infections per 100,000 people.
The situation marks a stark deterioration from September 2020, when detected numbers were often close to or at zero per day.
But a virologist and an environmental health scientist both told AFP that the uniquely high rate of detected infections per capita was at least in part — or even in large part — the result of a very high level of testing.
PCR and rapid tests combined have lately exceeded 50,000 per day, equating to more than five percent of the country’s population.
The measures come as three ministers sought to reassure tourism partners in a formal letter this week, and as the country has made significant progress on its vaccination campaign, with people in their mid to late forties now eligible for their first jab.
The country’s transport minister, deputy tourism minister and foreign minister likewise emphasised the exceptionally high level of testing in the letter, as they sought to give assurances that the holiday island which depends on tourism for its economy was a safe destination.
Government-controlled southern Cyprus has registered nearly 60,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus infection and over 296 deaths since the pandemic reached its shores in February-March 2020.
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