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COVID-19: Dominica prepared to leave borders closed until December – Prime Minister Skerrit

Dominica cannot afford another wave of the virus says Skerrit

COVID-19: Dominica prepared to leave borders closed until December - Prime Minister Skerrit
Thursday, July 2, 2020

The Dominica government says it is prepared to close the island-nation until December even as it announced plans to re-open its borders to international travel in August.

Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit said that Dominica cannot afford another wave of the virus that killed 516,000 people and infected nearly 11 million people since it was first detected in December last year in China.

While Dominica recorded 18 positive cases of the virus, the island, like many other countries worldwide, locked down its borders in a bid to prevent the spread of the virus.

The Skerrit administration announced that the borders will be opened to international travel on August 15 and the prime minister said it is imperative that Dominica maintains the protocols put in place to deal with the impact of the virus there.

“We have to keep studying what is happening in the rest of the world and whether there is a resurgence of the COVID-19. You see what is happening in Europe, they have decided they are opening but they will open up to certain countries and they have named those countries.

“So every country is mindful of this thing, every country is wary of it because one of the main things we have to avoid in Dominica is for there to be a reason to shut down the country again. This would not be good for us and therefore we need to avoid this. If it means we have to keep Dominica closed to the rest of the world until December, we will do so and as we have always done set aside the economic considerations because we do not want to have more of this COVID-19 in Dominica,” he said.

Skerrit said it was necessary for Dominicans to appreciate that “once you open there are risks associated and what we are seeking to do as a government is to mitigate against those risks and to put measures in place to mitigate against those risks”.

“We will never be able to eliminate it 100 percent but we are seeking to minimise the risks associated with re-opening,” he added.

Meanwhile, National Security Minister Rayburn Blackmoore has hinted at the possibility of an order being issued compeling all persons to wear masks in public.

He said as the country re-opens its borders to accommodate returning nationals on July 15, it was imperative that citizens do not become complacent.

“Notwithstanding the end of the curfew order, we are also contemplating the issuing of an order to mandate that all people to wear masks in public places because as we open our borders, notwithstanding all the systems we have put in place we are also opening to the risk associated so we have to ensure that the requisite protocols are maintained and also adhered to,” he said. -(CMC)

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