National responses to the COVID-19 pandemic

Last updated

Illustration showing how COVID-19 spreads and the impact of isolation on it Tree- How Covid-19 spreads.png
Illustration showing how COVID-19 spreads and the impact of isolation on it

National responses to the COVID-19 pandemic have been varied, and have included containment measures such as lockdowns, quarantines, and curfews. As of 24 November 2024, 776,840,500 cases of COVID-19 have been reported, resulting in 7,075,455 reported deaths. [1] The most affected countries in terms of confirmed cases are the United States, Brazil, India, Russia, South Africa, Peru, Mexico, Chile, the United Kingdom, and Iran. [2] [3]

Contents

Lockdowns

Country / territoryPlaceFirst lockdownSecond lockdownThird lockdownFourth lockdownFifth lockdownSixth lockdownSeventh lockdownEighth lockdownTotal length (days)Level
Start dateEnd dateLength (days)Start dateEnd dateLength (days)Start dateEnd dateLength (days)Start dateEnd dateLength (days)Start dateEnd dateLength (days)Start dateEnd dateLength (days)Start dateEnd dateLength (days)Start dateEnd dateLength (days)
Flag of Albania.svg Albania 2020-03-13 [4] 2020-06-01 [5] 8080National
Flag of Algeria.svg Algeria Algiers 2020-03-23 [6] 2020-05-14 [7] 5252City
Blida
Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina Greater Buenos Aires 2020-03-19 [8] 2020-11-08 [9] 2342021-05-22 [10] 2021-05-3092021-06-05 [11] 2021-06-062245Metropolitan area
Rest of the country2020-03-19 [8] 2020-05-10 [12] 522021-05-22 [10] 2021-05-3092021-06-05 [11] 2021-06-06263National
Flag of Armenia.svg Armenia 2020-03-24 [13] 2020-05-04 [14] 4141National
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia Melbourne 2020-03-31 [15] 2020-05-12 [16] [a] 432020-07-09 [b] [17] [18] 2020-10-27 [19] 1112021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-28 [21] 2021-06-10 [22] 142021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-10-21 [26] 78263Metropolitan area
Greater Shepparton 2020-03-312020-05-12 [16] 432020-08-06 [18] 2020-09-16 [18] 412021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-282021-06-0372021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-08-0952021-08-21 [27] 2021-09-15 [28] [29] 252021-10-02 [30] 2021-10-09 [31] 7145 Local government area
Ballarat 2020-03-312020-05-12 [16] 432020-08-06 [18] 2020-09-16 [18] 412021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-282021-06-0372021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-08-0952021-08-21 [27] 2021-09-09 [28] [29] 202021-09-16 [32] 2021-09-22 [c] [33] [34] 7140
Greater Geelong 2020-03-312020-05-12 [16] 432020-08-06 [18] 2020-09-16 [18] 412021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-282021-06-0372021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-08-0952021-08-21 [27] 2021-09-09 [28] [29] 202021-09-20 [35] 2021-09-26 [36] 7140
Surf Coast Shire 2020-03-312020-05-12 [16] 432020-08-06 [18] 2020-09-16 [18] 412021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-282021-06-0372021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-08-0952021-08-21 [27] 2021-09-09 [28] [29] 202021-09-20 [35] 2021-09-26 [36] 7140
Mitchell Shire 2020-03-312020-05-12 [16] 432020-07-09 [b] [37] 2020-09-16 [18] 702021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-282021-06-0372021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-08-0952021-08-21 [27] 2021-09-09 [28] [29] 202021-09-20 [35] 2021-10-13 [d] [38] 24186
Mildura 2020-03-312020-05-12 [16] 432020-08-06 [18] 2020-09-16 [18] 412021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-282021-06-0372021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-08-0952021-08-21 [27] 2021-09-09 [28] [29] 202021-10-09 [39] 2021-10-22 [40] 14147
Latrobe Valley 2020-03-312020-05-12 [16] 432020-08-06 [18] 2020-09-16 [18] 412021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-282021-06-0372021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-08-0952021-08-21 [27] 2021-09-09 [28] [29] 202021-09-29 [41] 2021-10-06 [42] 7140Region
Rest of regional Victoria [e] 2020-03-312020-05-12 [16] 432020-08-06 [18] 2020-09-16 [18] 412021-02-13 [20] 2021-02-17 [20] 52021-05-282021-06-0372021-07-16 [23] 2021-07-27 [24] 122021-08-05 [25] 2021-08-0952021-08-21 [27] 2021-09-09 [28] [29] 20133 State
South Australia 2020-11-19 [43] 2020-11-22 [44] 32021-07-21 [45] 2021-07-27762
Southern Tasmania 2021-10-16 [46] 2021-10-19355
Northern Beaches (NSW) 2020-12-19 [47] 2021-01-10 [48] 222021-06-262021-10-11 [f] [49] 107181 Local government area
Brisbane 2021-01-08 [50] 2021-01-11 [50] 32021-03-29 [51] 2021-04-01 [52] 32021-06-29 [53] 2021-07-0342021-07-31 [54] 2021-08-08 [55] 867Metropolitan area
Perth 2021-01-31 [56] 2021-02-05 [56] 52021-04-23 [57] 2021-04-26 [57] 32021-06-28 [58] 2021-07-02 [58] 461Metropolitan area
Peel 2021-01-31 [56] 2021-02-05 [56] 52021-04-23 [57] 2021-04-26 [57] 32021-06-282021-07-02461Region
South West 2021-01-31 [56] 2021-02-05 [56] 557
Illawarra 2021-06-26 [59] 2021-10-11 [g] [60] [61] [49] 107159
Greater Sydney 2021-06-26 [59] 2021-10-11 [h] [60] [61] [49] 107159Metropolitan area
Darwin 2021-06-27 [62] 2021-07-02 [63] 52021-08-162021-08-19357Metropolitan area
South East Queensland 2021-06-29 [53] 2021-07-0232021-07-312021-08-08863Region
Townsville 2021-06-29 [53] 2021-07-0232021-07-312021-08-08863Metropolitan area
Alice Springs 2021-06-30 [64] 2021-07-03355Metropolitan area
Central West 2021-07-20 [65] 2021-07-27 [65] 72021-08-142021-10-11 [i] [66] 58117Region
Hunter Region 2021-08-05 [67] [68] 2021-10-11 [j] [66] 67119
Upper Hunter2021-08-05 [67] 2021-09-16 [k] [66] [69] 4294
Muswellbrook 2021-08-05 [67] 2021-09-16 [l] [66] [69] 422021-09-28 [70] 2021-10-11 [m] 13107Local government area
Armidale 2021-08-07 [71] 2021-09-10 [72] 3487
Cairns Region 2021-08-08 [73] 2021-08-11 [74] 355Region
Yarrabah 2021-08-08 [73] 2021-08-11 [74] 355Local government area
Richmond Valley 2021-08-09 [75] 2021-09-10 [66] [76] 3284
Lismore 2021-08-09 [75] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 322021-09-16 [69] 2021-09-2372021-10-03 [77] 2021-10-11899
Byron Shire 2021-08-09 [75] 2021-09-10 [66] [76] 322021-09-21 [78] 2021-09-28791
Ballina 2021-08-09 [75] 2021-09-10 [66] [76] 3284
Tamworth 2021-08-09 [79] 2021-09-10 [66] [76] [72] 3284
Dubbo 2021-08-11 [80] 2021-10-11 [n] [66] [72] 61113
Australian Capital Territory 2021-08-12 [81] 2021-10-15 [82] 61114Territory
Regional NSW [o] 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 2881Region
Mid-Coast 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] [84] 2881Local government area
South Coast [p] 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-10-11 [q] [66] [72] 57109Region
Bega Valley 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-16 [r] [66] [72] [85] 3385Local government area
Goulburn–Mulwaree 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-10-11 [s] [66] [72] 57109
Snowy Monaro 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-16 [t] [66] [72] [85] 332021-09-30 [86] 2021-10-11 [87] 1196
Yass Valley 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [72] 282021-09-14 [88] 2021-09-271494
Albury (NSW) 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 282021-09-16 [69] 2021-09-23787
Cowra 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 282021-09-20 [89] 2021-10-05 [90] 1494
Glen Innes Severn (NSW) 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 282021-09-17 [91] 2021-09-24787
Hilltops (NSW) 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 282021-09-17 [91] 2021-10-01 [92] 1494
Port Macquarie-Hastings 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 282021-09-28 [70] 2021-10-05787
Oberon 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 282021-09-29 [93] 2021-10-11 [87] 1292
Gunnedah 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 282021-10-05 [94] 2021-10-11686
Casino 2021-08-14 [83] 2021-09-10 [66] [72] 282021-10-02 [95] 2021-10-11989Town
Rest of the country [u] 2020-03-23 [96] 2020-05-15 [97] 5252National
Flag of Austria.svg Austria 2020-03-16 [98] 2020-04-13 [99] 282020-11-03 [100] 2020-11-30 [100] 272020-12-26 [101] 2021-02-07 [102] 432021-11-22 [103] 2021-12-11 [104] 20118
Flag of Azerbaijan.svg Azerbaijan 2020-03-31 [105] 2020-08-30 [105] 152152
Flag of Bangladesh.svg Bangladesh 2020-03-26 [106] 2020-05-16 [107] 512021-04-05 [108] 2021-07-14 [109] 1002021-07-23 [110] 2021-08-10 [111] 18169
Flag of Barbados.svg Barbados 2020-03-28 [112] 2020-05-03 [112] 3636
Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium 2020-03-18 [113] 2020-05-04 [114] 472020-11-02 [115] 2020-12-14 [115] 422021-03-27 [116] 2021-04-26 [117] 30119
Flag of Bermuda.svg Bermuda 2020-04-04 [112] 2020-05-02 [118] 2828
Flag of Bhutan.svg Bhutan 2020-08-11 [119] 2020-09-01 [120] 2121
Flag of Bolivia.svg Bolivia 2020-03-22 [121] 2020-07-31 [122] 131131
Flag of Botswana.svg Botswana 2020-04-02 [123] 2020-04-30 [123] 2828
Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil Santa Catarina 2020-03-17 [124] 2020-04-07 [124] 2121 State
São Paulo 2020-03-24 [125] 2020-05-10 [126] 4747
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Bulgaria 2020-03-13 [v] [130] [131] 2020-06-15 [w] [133] [134] 942020-11-28 (de facto) [x] [136] 2021-01-31 [y] [136] [137] 652021-03-22 [z] [139] 2021-03-3110169National
Flag of Cambodia.svg Cambodia Phnom Penh 2021-04-15 [140] 2021-05-05 [141] 2121Municipality
Ta Khmau
Flag of Canada.svg Canada British Columbia 2020-03-18 [142] 2020-05-18 [143] 612020-11-07 [144] 2021-01-08 [144] 62123Province
Ontario 2020-03-17 [145] [146] 2020-05-14582021-04-03 [147] 2021-05-012886
Ontario - South 2020-12-26 [148] 2021-01-23 [148] 282021-04-08 [149] 2021-06-02 [149] 5583Region
Ontario - North 2020-12-26 [148] 2021-01-09 [148] 1414
Quebec 2020-03-182020-05-04472020-12-25 [150] 2021-01-11 [150] 18 [150] 65Province
Flag of Colombia.svg Colombia 2020-03-25 [151] 2020-06-30 [152] 9797National
Flag of the Republic of the Congo.svg Congo 2020-03-31 [153] 2020-04-20 [153] 2020
Flag of Costa Rica (state).svg Costa Rica 2020-03-23 [154] 2020-05-01 [155] 3939
Flag of Croatia.svg Croatia 2020-03-18 [156] 2020-05-11322020-12-22 [157] 2020-12-29 [158] 739
Flag of Cyprus.svg Cyprus 2020-03-24 [159] 2020-04-13 [159] 202021-01-10 [160] 2021-01-31 [160] 212021-04-26 [161] 2021-05-09 [161] 1354
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Czech Republic 2020-03-16 [98] 2020-04-12 [162] 272020-10-22 [163] 2021-03-28 [163] 174201
Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark 2020-03-12 [164] 2020-04-13 [165] 332020-12-25 [166] 2021-03-01 [167] 6699
Flag of Ecuador.svg Ecuador 2020-03-16 [168] 2020-03-31 [168] 1515
Flag of El Salvador.svg El Salvador 2020-03-12 [169] 2020-04-02 [169] 2121
Flag of Eritrea.svg Eritrea 2020-04-02 [170] 2020-04-23 [170] 2121
Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia 2021-03-11 [171] 2021-04-11 [171] 3131National
Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji Lautoka 2020-03-20 [172] 2020-04-07 [173] 182021-04-1918City
Suva 2020-04-03 [174] 2020-04-17 [175] 1414
Flag of France.svg France Nationwide2020-03-17 [176] 2020-05-11 [177] 552020-10-30 [178] 2020-12-15 [179] 462021-04-04 [180] 2021-05-03 [180] 29130National
Paris 2021-03-19 [181] 2021-04-1830131 Region
Flag of Finland.svg Finland 2021-03-08 [182] 2021-03-28 [182] 2020National
Flag of Georgia (country).svg Georgia 2020-03-31 [183] 2020-04-21 [183] 2121
Flag of Germany.svg Germany different regionally2020-03-16 [aa] [185] 2020-05-30 [186] [187]
to 2020-05-11 [188]
762020-11-02 [189] 2021-03-01 to 2021-06-11 [190] [191] 119 to 222179 to 298
Berchtesgadener Land 2020-10-20 [192] 2020-11-03 [193] 1443 to 64 District
Flag of Ghana.svg Ghana Accra 2020-03-30 [194] 2020-04-12 [195] 1313Metropolitan area
Kumasi
Flag of Greece.svg Greece Nationwide2020-03-23 [196] 2020-05-04 [197] 422020-11-07 [198] 2021-03-22 [199] 135177National
Thessaloniki 2020-11-03 [200] 139181 Regional unit
Serres
Flag of Guernsey.svg Guernsey 2020-03-25 [201] 2020-06-20 [202] 872021-01-23 [203] 2021-02-22 [204] 30117National
Flag of Honduras.svg Honduras 2020-03-20 [205] 2020-05-17 [206] 5858
Flag of Hungary.svg Hungary 2020-03-28 [207] 2020-04-10 [207] 1313
Flag of India.svg India Nationwide 2020-03-25 [208] 2020-06-07 [209] 7474
Bengaluru 2021-04-27 [210] 2021-05-091212 Region
Delhi 2021-04-19 [211] 2021-05-31 [212] 4242 Region
Haryana 2021-05-03 [213] 2021-05-1077 State
Maharashtra 2021-04-14 [214] 2021-06-15 [215] 6262 State
Odisha 2021-05-05 [216] 2021-05-191414 State
Rajasthan 2021-05-10 [217] 2021-06-08 [218] 2929 State
Uttar Pradesh 2021-04-30 [219] 2021-05-10 [220] 1010 State
Flag of Iran.svg Iran 2020-03-14 [221] 2020-04-20 [222] 372021-04-14 [223] 2021-04-241447National
Flag of Iraq.svg Iraq 2020-03-22 [224] 2020-04-11 [225] 2020
Flag of Ireland.svg Ireland All 26 counties 2020-03-12 [ab] [226] [227] 2020-05-18 [228] 672020-10-21 [229] 2020-12-01 [230] 412020-12-24 [ac] [231] 2021-04-12 [232] 119227
Kildare 2020-08-07 [233] [234] 2020-08-31 [235] 2424Regional
Laois 2020-08-21 [236] 1414
Offaly
Flag of Israel.svg Israel Bnei Brak 2020-04-02 [237] 2020-04-16 [238] 14304286City
Nationwide2020-09-18 [239] 2020-10-18 [240] 2020-12-27 [241] 2021-02-07 [242] 72National
Flag of Italy.svg Italy Nationwide 2020-03-09 [ad] [243] 2020-05-18 [244] 702020-12-24 [245] [ae] 2021-01-06 [245] 132021-03-15 [246] 2021-04-3046129National
Lombardy 2020-11-06 [247] 2020-12-03 [248] 272021-01-17 [249] 2021-01-3013110 Region
Piedmont 2020-11-06 [247] 2020-12-03 [248] 97
Aosta Valley 2020-11-06 [247] 2020-12-03 [248]
Calabria 2020-11-06 [247] 2020-12-03 [248]
Sicily 2021-01-17 [249] 2021-01-301383
Province of Bolzano 2021-01-17 [249] 2021-01-30 Province
Flag of Jamaica.svg Jamaica Saint Catherine 2020-04-15 [250] 2020-04-22 [250] 77 Parish
Flag of Jordan.svg Jordan 2020-03-18 [251] 2020-04-30 [252] 432020-11-10 [253] 2020-11-15 [253] 548National
Flag of Kosovo.svg Kosovo 2020-03-14 [254] 2020-05-04 [255] 5151
Flag of Kuwait.svg Kuwait 2020-05-10 [256] 2020-05-31 [256] 2121
Flag of Lebanon.svg Lebanon 2020-03-15 [257] 2020-03-28 [257] 132020-11-14 [258] 2020-11-281427
Flag of Libya.svg Libya 2020-03-22 [259] 2020-06-27 [260] 9797
Flag of Lithuania.svg Lithuania 2020-03-16 [261] 2020-06-18 [262] 942020-11-07 [263] 2020-11-2821115
Flag of Madagascar.svg Madagascar Antananarivo 2020-03-23 [264] 2020-04-20 [265] 2828City
Toamasina
Flag of Malaysia.svg Malaysia 2020-03-18 [266] 2020-06-09 [267] 832021-01-132021-02-10282021-06-01 [268] 2021-08-16 [269] 76187National
Flag of Mexico.svg Mexico Nationwide2020-03-23 [270] 2020-06-01 [270] 7070
Chihuahua 2020-10-23 [271] 2020-12-0644114 State
Durango 2020-11-03 [272] 2020-12-0633103
Baja California 2020-12-0770
Mexico City 2020-12-19 [273] 70
State of Mexico 2020-12-19 [273] 70
Morelos 2021-01-0470
Guanajuato 2021-01-0470
Flag of Mongolia.svg Mongolia 2020-03-10 [274] 2020-03-16 [274] 62020-11-17 [275] 2020-12-011521National
Flag of Montenegro.svg Montenegro Tuzi 2020-03-24 [276] 2020-05-05 [277] 4242Municipality
Flag of Morocco.svg Morocco 2020-03-19 [278] 2020-06-10 [279] 8383National
Flag of Myanmar.svg
Myanmar
Yangon 2020-04-18 [280] 2020-07-01 [281] 742020-09-01 [282] 2021-04-10 [283] 2202021-07-08 [284] 2021-10-27 [285] 111405City
Flag of Namibia.svg Namibia 2020-03-27 [af] [286] 2020-05-04 [287] 3838
Flag of Nepal.svg Nepal Nationwide2020-03-24 [288] 2020-07-21 [289] 120120
Kathmandu 2020-08-20 [290] 2020-09-09 [290] 21141City
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands 2020-03-15 [291] 2020-04-06 [291] 222020-12-15 [292] 2021-06-05 [293] 1722021-12-19 [294] 2022-01-14 [295] 26220National
Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand Nationwide2020-03-23 [296] [297] 2020-05-13 [298] 522021-08-18 [296] 2021-09-07 [296] 2173National
Auckland 2020-08-12 [299] 2020-08-30 [296] 192021-02-14 [300] 2021-02-17 [300] 32021-02-28 [296] 2021-03-07 [296] 72021-08-18 [296] 2021-11-29(TBC) [301] 104185 Region
Flag of Nigeria.svg Nigeria Abuja 2020-03-30 [302] 2020-04-12 [302] 1313City
Lagos
Ogun State
Flag of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.svg Northern Cyprus 2020-03-30 [303] 2020-05-04 [304] 3535National
Flag of North Korea.svg North Korea Nationwide2022-05-12 [305] not setnot setNational
Kaesong 2020-07-25 [306] 2020-08-14 [307] 2020City
Flag of Oman.svg Oman Muscat 2020-04-10 [308] 2020-05-29 [309] 4949 Governorate
Jalan Bani Bu Ali 2020-04-16 [310] 2020-05-29 [311] 4343 Province
Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan 2020-03-24 [312] 2020-05-09 [313] 462021-05-08 [314] 2021-05-181046National
Flag of Panama.svg Panama 2020-03-25 [315] 2020-05-31
(downgraded to a night and weekend curfew) [316]
6767
Flag of Papua New Guinea.svg Papua New Guinea 2020-03-24 [317] 2020-04-07 [317] 1414
Flag of Paraguay.svg Paraguay 2020-03-20 [318] 2020-05-03 [319] 4444
Flag of Peru.svg Peru 2020-03-16 [320] 2020-06-30 [321] 106106
Flag of the Philippines.svg Philippines Cebu 2020-03-27 [322] 2020-05-15 [ag] [323]
to 2020-05-31 [ah] [324]
49 to 6549 to 65 Province
Davao Region 2020-03-19 [325] 2020-05-15 [323] 5757 Region
Luzon 2020-03-15 [ai] [326] 2020-04-30 [aj] [327]
to 2020-05-15 [ak] [328]
to 2020-05-31 [ah] [324]
46 to 61 to 772020-08-04 [329] [al] 2020-08-18 [329] [al] 152021-01-252021-02-15212021-03-292021-09-1517061 to 92 Island group
Soccsksargen 2020-03-23 [325] 2020-05-15 [330] 5353Region
Flag of Poland.svg Poland 2020-03-13 [331] 2020-04-11 [332] 292020-12-28 [333] 2021-01-17 [333] 202021-03-20 [334] 2021-04-25 [335] 3685National
Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal 2020-03-19 [336] 2020-04-02 [332] 142021-01-15 [337] 2021-03-15 [338] 5973
Flag of Qatar.svg Qatar Doha Industrial Area 2020-03-11 [339] 2020-06-15 [340] 9696 Industrial park
Flag of Romania.svg Romania 2020-03-25 [341] 2020-05-12 [342] 4848National
Flag of Russia.svg Russia Moscow 2020-03-30 [343] 2020-05-12 [344] [345] 432021-10-28 [346] 2021-11-04750Metropolitan area
Rest of the country [am] 2020-03-28 [347] 2020-04-30 [347] 3333National
Flag of Rwanda.svg Rwanda 2020-03-21 [348] 2020-04-19 [349] 2929
Flag of Samoa.svg Samoa 2020-03-26 [350] 2020-04-08 [351] 1313
Flag of San Marino.svg San Marino 2020-03-14 [352] 2020-05-05 [353] 5252
Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Saudi Arabia Jeddah 2020-03-29 [354] 2020-06-21 [355] 8484City
Mecca 2020-03-26 [354] 8787
Medina
Qatif 2020-03-09 [356] 104104Area
Riyadh 2020-03-26 [354] 8787City
Flag of Serbia.svg Serbia 2020-03-15 [332] 2020-04-21 [357]
to 2020-05-04 [358]
37 to 5037 to 50National
Flag of Singapore.svg Singapore 2020-04-07 [359] 2020-06-01 [360] 562021-05-16 [361] 2021-06-13282021-07-222021-08-09182021-09-272021-11-21

[362]

56158
Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa 2020-03-26 [363] 2020-04-30 [364] 352020-12-282021-01-15182021-06-282021-07-252780
Flag of Spain.svg Spain 2020-03-14 [365] 2020-05-09 [366] 5656
Flag of Sri Lanka.svg Sri Lanka 2020-03-18 [367] 2020-06-21 [368] 952021-08-20 [369] 2021-10-01 [370] 42137
Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland 2020-03-17 [371] 2020-04-27 [372] 412021-01-18 [373] 2021-03-01 [374] 4283
Flag of Thailand.svg Thailand 2020-03-25 [375] 2020-05-31 [376] 6767
Flag of Trinidad and Tobago.svg Trinidad and Tobago 2020-03-17 [377] 2020-03-31 [377] 1414
Flag of Tunisia.svg Tunisia 2020-03-22 [378] 2020-04-19 [379] 2828
Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey 2020-04-23 [380] 2020-04-27 [380] 44Only in 30 metropolitan cities and Zonguldak.
Nationwide2021-04-29 [381] 2021-05-17 [381] 1818National
Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine 2020-03-17 [332] 2020-04-24 [332] 3838
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg United Arab Emirates 2020-03-26 [382] 2020-04-17 [383] 2222
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom England 2020-03-23 [384] 2020-07-04 [385] 1032020-11-05 [386] 2020-12-02 [386] 272021-01-05 [387] 2021-03-28 [388] [an] 83213
Scotland 2020-06-29 [389] 982020-12-26 [390] 2021-04-02 [391] 97195
Northern Ireland 2020-07-03 [392] 1022020-11-27 [393] 2020-12-11 [393] 142020-12-26 [394] 2021-04-12 [395] 107223 Country
Wales 2020-07-13 [396] 1122020-10-23 [397] 2020-11-09 [397] 172020-12-20 [398] 2021-03-13 [399] [400] [ao] 83212
North West2020-12-31 [401] 2021-03-298888 Region
North East2020-12-31 [401] 2021-03-298888
East Midlands2020-12-31 [401] 2021-03-298888
West Midlands2020-12-31 [401] 2021-03-298888
Norfolk2020-12-26 [402] 2021-03-299393 County
Suffolk2020-12-26 [403] 2021-03-299393
Cambridgeshire2020-12-26 [404] 2021-03-299393
Essex2020-12-26 [405] 2021-03-299393
London area2020-12-20 [406] 2021-03-299999City
Kent & South East2020-12-20 [406] 2021-03-299999Region
Leicester 2020-06-30 [407] 2020-07-24 [408] 2424County
Glasgow 2020-11-20 [409] 2020-12-11 [409] 2121
East Renfrewshire
Renfrewshire
East Dunbartonshire
West Dunbartonshire
North Lanarkshire
South Lanarkshire
East Ayrshire
South Ayrshire
West Lothian
Stirling
Flag of the United States.svg United States California 2020-03-19 [410] 2021-06-15 [411] 453453 State
Connecticut 2020-03-23 [412] 2020-04-22 [413] 3030State
Illinois 2020-03-21 [414] 2020-05-30 [415] 7070
Kansas City in Kansas 2020-03-24 [416] 2020-04-19 [417] 2626City
Massachusetts 2020-03-24 [418] 2020-05-04 [418] 4141State
Michigan 2020-03-24 [419] 2020-04-13 [413] 2020
New York 2020-03-22 [420] 2020-06-13 [421] 8383
Oregon 2020-03-24 [422] 2020-05-15 [423] 5353
Wisconsin 2020-03-24 [424] 2020-05-13 [425] 5050
Flag of Venezuela.svg Venezuela 2020-03-17 [426] 2020-05-135757National
Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam Nationwide2020-04-01 [427] 2020-04-22 [428] 2121
Da Nang 2020-07-28 [429] 2020-09-05 [430] 3960City
Hai Duong 2021-02-16 [431] 2021-03-021435Province, Chi Linh city lockdown began from 28 January.
Bac Ninh 2021-05-18 [432] [433] 23234 districts and 1 city
Bac Giang 2021-05-18 [434] [435] 236 districts
Flag of Zimbabwe.svg Zimbabwe 2020-03-30 [436] 2020-05-02 [437] 3333National

Notes

  1. Restrictions were further eased on the 1st of June 2021, however during the time between then and the 12th of May 2021, "Stay at home orders" were not active and hence this period didn't constitute what is internationally considered a "lockdown".
  2. 1 2 Stage 3 lockdown imposed on 8 July; Stage 4 lockdown imposed on 2 August 2020
  3. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  4. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  5. All of Victoria except Melbourne, Greater Shepparton, Ballarat, Greater Geelong, Surf Coast Shire and Mitchell Shire
  6. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  7. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  8. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  9. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  10. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  11. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  12. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  13. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  14. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  15. Applies for all others Regional NSW outside Greater Sydney, Hunter Region, Dubbo, Central West, South Coast, Goulburn, Queanbeyan-Palerang and Snowy Monaro
  16. Applies for all South Coast except Bega Valley after 16/09/2021
  17. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  18. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  19. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  20. End-date of lockdown is subject to the vaccine rollout or 0 cases for 14 days. Restrictions are set to be eased when 70% of the eligible population has been vaccinated
  21. Applies for further measures in each Australian state and territory
  22. Initially to last until 13 April 2020, included closures of universities, schools, restaurants and other establishments, a ban on mass gatherings, suspension of sports competitions for more than two months, certain temporary restrictions on the free movement of citizens, but no strict "Stay at home order". [127] A number of lockdown measures were already eased or lifted in April [128] and May 2020. [129]
  23. Depending on the strictness of the definition for a lockdown; some sources such as Politico Europe consider it to have ended by 9 May, with a total duration of 57 days. [132]
  24. Closures of all educational institutions, restaurants and other establishments, a ban on most cultural events, all excursions and forms of group tourism, children forbidden to participate in organized sports events, no "Stay at home order", described as a "soft" or "partial" lockdown and officially entered into force at 23:30 on 27 November. [135]
  25. The lockdown was initially to end on 21 December 2020, but was subsequently extended until 31 January 2021, though with a few of the restrictions relaxed, such as children in kindergartens and in grades 1-4 being able to attend in-person classes from January 2021.
  26. Preceded by some measures on the regional level, no "Stay at home order". [138]
  27. Lockdown was started in Freiburg, Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria on 20 March 2020. Two days later, it was expanded to the whole of Germany [184]
  28. A national stay-at-home order was officially declared on 27 March
  29. A full third lockdown was declared from 30 December and was repeatedly extended.
  30. Lockdown was first started in Northern Italy on 8 March 2020, then expanded to the rest of Italy the following day
  31. The lockdown was suspended on 28, 29, 30 December 2020 and 4 January 2021
  32. Lockdown was started in the regions of Erongo and Khomas but effectively enforced countrywide. On 14 April the lockdown was extended to 4 May and to all of Namibia.
  33. Except in Cebu City only where it was extended to 16 days
  34. 1 2 Lockdown was extended to areas under high risk COVID-19 zones
  35. Lockdown was started in Metro Manila, but expanded to the rest of Luzon two days later, 17 March 2020
  36. In most Luzon areas only, except Metro Manila and selected areas of Luzon are on high risk COVID-19 zones
  37. Lockdown was extended to Metro Manila and remaining areas of Luzon
  38. 1 2 Metro Manila, Bulacan, Cavite and Rizal only.
  39. Applies for mandatory holidays and further measures in each Russian region
  40. England has followed an incremental easing of restrictions since 8 March 2021. Most lockdown restrictions were lifted between March and June, July 19 is the date set for the expiry of most legal restrictions in England. Although some sources describe this date as the "end" of lockdown, March 28 was the date in which the "stay at home orders" were ended. This fits the most internationally accepted definition of what constitutes a lockdown.
  41. Most lockdown restrictions were lifted between March and June. March 13 was the date in which the "stay at home orders" were ended. This fits the most internationally accepted definition of what constitutes a lockdown.

The pandemic has caused worldwide curfews and similar restrictions (stay-at-home orders, shelter-in-place orders, shutdowns/lockdowns) established to prevent further spread of COVID-19. The pandemic has resulted in the largest amount of shutdowns/lockdowns worldwide at the same time in history.[ citation needed ] By 26 March, 1.7 billion people worldwide were under some form of lockdown, [438] which increased to 3.9 billion people by the first week of April — more than half of the world's population. [439] [440]

As of 12 April, nearly 300 million people, or about 90 per cent of the population, are under some form of lockdown in the United States, [441] more than 50 million people are in lockdown in the Philippines, [442] about 59 million people are in lockdown in South Africa, [443] and 1.3 billion people are in lockdown in India. [444] [445]

Africa

Ghana

The first two cases of COVID-19 was confirmed on 12 March 2020, when two infected people came to Ghana; one from Norway and the other from Turkey. [446] On 11 March, President Nana Akufo-Addo directed the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, to make the cedi equivalent of $US100 million [447] available to enhance Ghana's COVID-19 preparedness and response plan. [448] The Ghana COVID-19 Private Sector Fund was also initiated to aid in the fight against the pandemic.[ citation needed ]

Bans and lockdowns

Veronica Bucket, a handwashing mechanism originating in Ghana. It is mounted in many open spaces and at entrances for mandatory hand-washing. Veronica Bucket 42.jpg
Veronica Bucket, a handwashing mechanism originating in Ghana. It is mounted in many open spaces and at entrances for mandatory hand-washing.

On 15 March, at 10 pm, President Nana Akufo-Addo banned all public gatherings including conferences, workshops, funerals, festivals, political rallies, church activities and other related events to reduce the spread of COVID-19 at a press briefing on the state of COVID-19. Basic schools, senior high schools and universities, both public and private, have also been closed. Only BECE and WASSCE candidates were permitted to remain in school under social distancing protocols. [449] The use of Veronica buckets have become very popular in Ghana following the outbreak of the novel coronavirus as citizens engage in frequent hand washing to stem its spread. [450] [451] On 30 March, the partial lock down of Accra and Kumasi took effect. [452] In April 2020, At a press briefing, the Director General of the Ghana Health Service, announced the commencement of local production of nose masks as part of efforts to arrest the spread of the pandemic. [453] According to the new Executive Instrument, E.I. 164, signed by the President on 15 June 2020, people who refuse to wear face masks in public could face jail terms of between 4–10 years or a fine of between GHS12,000 (approx US$2,065) and GHS60,000 (approx US$10,320) or both would be made. This came after the mandatory wearing of nose masks [454]

Government responses

From 3 April, over 464 markets were disinfected across the country. [455] [456] The second phase of nationwide fumigation begun in July. [457] On 23 September, the MoE with GES collaborated with Zoomlion to disinfect SHS across Ghana to pave way for the reopening of schools. [458] The Finance Minister claimed in his report that the Government spent about 54.3 million Ghana cedis to provide cooked and uncooked food to the vulnerable during the 3-week lockdown. [459] He also claimed Government would provide free electricity and water for the rest of 2020. [460]

The Parliament of Ghana granted a tax waiver of GHS174 million cedis (equivalent to US$30 million) on income taxes of frontline workers. This spanned for three months from July to September 2020. [461] [462] On 15 October, the MoH received a COVID-19 AI software for detecting the virus on Chest X-rays. [463] Government also relaunched the GH COVID-19 tracker app after it was launched on 13 April. [464] Various treatment centers were built across the country such as the Ghana Infectious Disease Centre, [465] to help in the National COVID-19 Treatment. [466] [467] Ghana became the first country to use drone aircraft in the fight against the pandemic through the transport of COVID-19 test samples. [468] [469] [470]

Namibia

On 17 March President Hage Geingob declared a state of emergency as a legal basis to restrict fundamental rights. The prohibition of large gatherings was clarified to apply to 50 or more people. [471] Measures such as the closure of all borders, suspension of gatherings were implemented. [472] All public and private schools were also closed for a month. [473] By 14 April, a National lockdown was enforced to all regions in the country. [474]

Access to information and surveillance

A COVID-19 communication hotline (0800100100) was established on 15 March 2020 which is run by the Ministry of Health and Social Services and the Centre for Disease Control of Namibia (CDC). [475] The hotline serves to answer general enquiries of the public, assisting persons seeking guidance from the Ministry and reporting possible symptoms or cases of COVID-19. [476]

The Government also announced on 18 March that it will strengthen their communication to the public via various platforms, such as the COVID-19 communication centre operated by NBC, in an attempt to "mitigate and refute misinformation, fear and panic especially from social media". [476] The centre was fully functional by middle April 2020. [477]

With the establishment of a multi-disciplinary Emergency Response team, the Ministry intensified their surveillance in monitoring the situation of COVID-19 in the country, especially at the borders of Namibia. The response team operates 24/7. [476]

Testing

Before the confirmation of COVID-19 in Namibia, tests could not be done locally. Test samples were instead sent to South Africa, which accounted for longer than usual waiting times. Namibian Institute of Pathology (NIP) started testing locally in Windhoek at the end of March 2020. In late April, private laboratory PathCare started testing samples. Namibia was hit by a lack of reagents at the end of April, which slowed down testing however, private testing at PathCare was expensive compared to that of the state (NIP) which offers free COVID-19 tests. [478]

Economic stimulus package

An Emergency Income Grant was set up by government to distribute N$ 750 to every person whose income was affected by the pandemic or faced difficult conditions due to the lockdown. [474] Over 800,000 people applied for this grant; 346,000 of them were paid by the end of April. [479]

South Africa

Greenmarket square 20200320.jpg
Greenmarket Square 20200327.jpg
Greenmarket Square in Cape Town, South Africa seven days before (left) and on the first day (right) of the COVID-19 national lockdown. After the lockdown the market stall traders that normally setup on the square everyday are not present and only people exempt from the lockdown (security personnel and municipal employees) can be seen.

President Cyril Ramaphosa declared that South Africa would undergo a national lockdown, for a period of 21 days, from 26 March to 16 April 2020. This drastic measure was intended to help keep the viral infection rate as low as possible and save lives. [480] On Thursday 9 April, President Ramaphosa announced an extension of two weeks to the lockdown, until the end of April. [481] Exempt from the lockdown are people deemed necessary for the effective response to the pandemic such as health workers, pharmacy and laboratory personnel, emergency personnel, [482] [483] security services, [484] [482] [483] supermarkets, transportation and logistical services, petrol stations, banks, essential financial as well as payment services [482] [483] and those working in industries that can affect the economy when shut down. This include mines and steel mills. [484]

Testing

The National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) started testing people in South Africa for SARS-CoV-2 on 28 January 2020, and by 7 February had conducted 42 of such tests. [485] State hospitals were offering free COVID-19 testing by mid-March. [486] On 30 March 2020, the government announced its intentions of initiating an enhanced screening and testing programme. [487] By the start of April, 67 mobile testing units had been established and 47000 people had been tested, some in drive-through facilities. [488]

Clinical trials, vaccines, and treatment

On 17 March 2020, the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority announced that it would expedite review of treatments, vaccines and clinical trials. [489] A team from 8 universities and 14 hospitals led by Helen Rees and Jeremy Nel from the University of the Witwatersrand participated in the World Health Organization Solidarity Clinical Trials that investigated medications. [490] A COVID-19 vaccine trial was launched in Gauteng province, towards the end of June 2020 in collaboration with the Jenner Institute, University of Oxford and AstraZeneca. [491] [492] A second vaccine trial was launched during mid August 2020 in collaboration with a US Maryland based biotechnology company, Novavax, with funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. [493] A third vaccine trial was launched in September 2020 by Johnson & Johnson/Janssen. [492]

Other countries and territories

Asia

China

During the COVID-19 pandemic in mainland China, the government of China under CCP general secretary Xi Jinping's administration pursued a zero-COVID strategy to prevent the domestic spread of COVID-19 [494] until late 2022. [495] Aspects of the response have been controversial, with the zero-COVID approach being praised [496] [497] and the government's lack of transparency, [498] [499] censorship, [500] [501] and spread of misinformation [502] being criticized. The government abandoned its zero-COVID policy on 7 December 2022. [503]

After discovery of a cluster of patients with pneumonia of unknown etiology in Wuhan, Hubei Province, a public notice on the outbreak was distributed on 31 December 2019. [504] Three days earlier on 28 December 2019, Chinese researchers in Beijing uploaded a fully mapped sequence of COVID-19's structure to the NIH GenBank, but the report was never publicly accessible due to it missing technical, non-scientific information required for submission despite NIH attempts to communicate with the report author. [505] On 8 January 2020, a new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) was announced by Chinese scientists as the cause of the new disease; [506] and on 10 January a nearly identical virus to the 28 December upload was sequenced and its genome made available online. [507] On 17 January 2024, The Wall Street Journal released a report about the former 28 December upload that officially contradicted the Chinese government's claim that knowledge of the cause of the outbreak in the early weeks of January 2020 was unknown, and that information was shared as soon as it was available. [505]

On 23 January 2020, the Chinese government banned travel to and from Wuhan, enforced strict quarantines in affected regions and initiated a national response. [504] The epidemic in Hubei province peaked on 4 February 2020. [504] Large temporary hospitals were built in Wuhan to isolate patients with mild-to-moderate symptoms, with the first opening on 5 February 2020. [496] The epidemic was heavily concentrated within Hubei province and Wuhan. Through 22 March 2020, over 80% of the recorded cases in China were in Hubei province, with over 60% of cases nationwide occurring in Wuhan alone. [508]

By the summer of 2020, China had largely brought the outbreak under control, ending widespread community transmission. [509] After the initial outbreak, lockdowns and other restrictive measures were eased throughout China. [510] The lockdown in Wuhan was lifted on 8 April 2020. [510] It is estimated that the epidemic control measures held the death toll due to COVID-19 in Wuhan to under 5,000 from January to March 2020. [511]

China was one of a small number of countries that pursued an elimination strategy, sustaining zero or low case numbers over the long term. [510] Until late 2022, most cases in China were imported from abroad, and several new outbreaks were quickly controlled through intense short-term public health measures, including large-scale testing, contact tracking technology, and mandatory isolation of infected individuals. [510] In the 18 months following containment of the initial outbreak in Wuhan, two COVID-19 deaths were recorded. [512] [513] In December 2022, the Chinese government ended its zero-COVID policy and mass testing following protests across the country. [495]

In 2020 and 2021, China was the largest exporter of COVID-19 critical medical products. [514] [515] China was the world's largest exporter of face masks, increasing exports by around 600% in the first half of 2020. [515] A number of COVID-19 vaccines have been developed in China, which have been used in its vaccination programme and international vaccine diplomacy. Through November 2021, China was the world's largest exporter of COVID-19 vaccines, with a cumulative share of around 40% of worldwide exports (totalling around 1.5 billion doses), according to the World Trade Organization. [516]

China's response to the initial Wuhan COVID-19 outbreak has been both praised and criticised. In October 2020, The Lancet Infectious Diseases reported: "While the world is struggling to control COVID-19, China has managed to control the pandemic rapidly and effectively." [496] The Chinese government has been criticized for censorship, which observers have attributed to a culture of institutional censorship affecting the country's press and Internet. The government censored whistleblowers, journalists, and social media posts about the outbreak. During the beginning of the pandemic, the Chinese government made efforts to clamp down on discussion and hide reporting about it, as such information was seen as unfavorable for local officials. Efforts to fund and control research into the virus's origins have continued up to the present. [517]

Due to its zero-COVID policy, China’s economy continued to squeeze. However, on 11 November 2022, the government eased the restrictions, while claiming to continue the war against the pandemic. The government reduced the quarantine restrictions from 10 days to eight, where travelers were required to spend five days instead of seven in a hotel quarantine and three at home. Besides, the airlines were also exempted from a penalty for bringing in COVID positive travelers. [518] [519]

India

The Indian government airlifted 324 of its citizens from China on 31 January and 1 February via Air India special chartered flights. [520] After Pakistan's refusal to evacuate its students from Wuhan, the Indian government offered to support them with evacuation along with citizens of other neighbouring countries. [521] On 17 February, India announced a special C-17 Globemaster flight carrying medical supplies to support China in Wuhan and evacuating citizens of India and neighbouring countries. India eventually evacuated 647 people including citizens of Maldives and Bangladesh. [522]

On 15 March, after a video conference of SAARC leaders, PM Narendra Modi allocated 74 crore (US$10 million) of funds classified as COVID-19 Emergency Fund for the SAARC countries. [523]

As a precautionary measure, India closed all of its international land borders on 16 March. [524] [525] On 22 March, India locked down places where cases had been confirmed—82 districts in 22 states and Union Territories—until 31 March, [526] although essential services and commodities were to continue. [527] [528] 80 cities including major cities such as Bengaluru, Chennai, Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Nagpur, Varanasi and Raipur were also put under lockdown. [529] [530]

On 24 March, the government announced a nationwide lockdown to be in effect for 21 days from 25 March until 14 April. [531] This lockdown included Indian Railways, the biggest employer in India; it was the first shutdown of the trains in 167 years. [532]

Indonesia

Many Indonesians criticised the government for a slow response and downplaying the pandemic. WHO, Australian government, and United States embassy in Indonesia have expressed their doubts about the Indonesian government's response to the pandemic. [533]

The governor of West Sumatra province, Irwan Prayitno faced backlash for accepting 174 tourists from China to the province. 174 Chinese tourists from Kunming arrived at Minangkabau International Airport at Padang Pariaman Regency as Citilink adds Padang – Kunming route. Prayitno received further backlash after welcoming the group of tourists himself at the airport and giving them a "grand welcome" with a cultural parade. The move angered local residents who demanded the governor return the group to China. [534] [535]

Health experts are concerned that the country is failing to identify the transmission of the virus. [536] Marc Lipsitch, professor of epidemiology at the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, "analysed air traffic out of the Chinese city at the centre of the outbreak in China and suggested in a report ... that Indonesia might have missed cases" of coronavirus. [537] [538] [539] Western diplomats [540] [541] [542] as well as local [536] [543] and international [544] [545] [546] news outlets postulated that the lack of cases within Indonesia result from inadequate testing and under reporting, as opposed to sheer luck and divine intervention. [547] [548]

The government faced a backlash after instead pledging to set aside IDR 72 billion ($5m) to pay for social media influencers to attract tourists to Indonesia. [549]

Indonesian president Joko Widodo has been criticised by the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, [550] human rights groups, [551] and by political parties including Golkar and Partai Keadilan Sejahtera [552] [553] for a lack of transparency regarding the information on COVID-19. Widodo has insisted not to share with the travel history details of patients tested positive with COVID-19 in an attempt to reduce panic and uneasiness in the general public. [554]

Iran

Disinfection of Tehran subway wagons against COVID-19 Disinfection of Tehran subway wagons against coronavirus 2020-02-26 09.jpg
Disinfection of Tehran subway wagons against COVID-19

Iran reported its first confirmed cases of SARS-CoV-2 infections on 19 February 2020 in Qom, where according to the Ministry of Health and Medical Education, both had died later that day. [555] [556]

Early measures announced by the government included the cancellation of concerts and other cultural events, [557] sporting events, [558] and Friday prayers, [559] closure of universities, higher education institutions and schools, [560] and allocated 5 trillion rials to combat the virus. [561] President Hassan Rouhani said on 26 February 2020 that there were no plans to quarantine areas affected by the outbreak, and only individuals would be quarantined. [562] However, Shia shrines in Qom remained open to pilgrims. [563]

Iran became a center of the spread of the virus after China. [564] [565] Amidst claims of a cover-up of the extent of the outbreak in the country, [566] over ten countries have traced their cases back to Iran, indicating that the extent of the outbreak may be more severe than that admitted by the Iranian government. [565] [567] The Iranian Parliament was shut down, with 23 of the 290 members of parliament reported to have had tested positive for the virus on 3 March. [568] A number of senior government officials as well as two members of parliament have died from the disease. [569]

Criticism against Iranian government's responses

Deputy Health Minister Iraj Harirchi (left) at a press conference after which he tested positive for the virus. 13981205000415637181505100958241 nshst khbry skhngwy dwlt.jpg
Deputy Health Minister Iraj Harirchi (left) at a press conference after which he tested positive for the virus.

Iranians criticized government authorities for proceeding with elections while the disease was spreading and closing secular spaces while keeping shrines open, especially in the Shia holy city of Qom. [570] Asif Shuja of the National University of Singapore's Middle East Institute suggested that "the fact that Iran reported deaths on the same day as its first infections right before its parliamentary elections 'can compel anyone' that there has been a cover-up". [571] Scrutiny has also been targeted at the government's unwillingness to implement area-wide quarantine measures like those implemented by China and Italy, with Iranian officials calling quarantines "old-fashioned." [572] There have been concerns that the Iranian government's official counts were an underestimate. [573] The WHO's director-general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said that "the WHO has its "own mechanism" for checking facts and has not seen problems with Iran's reported figures". [571]

Japan

On 27 February 2020, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe requested that all Japanese elementary, junior high, and high schools close until early April to help contain the virus. [574]

The outbreak has been a concern for the 2020 Summer Olympics which is scheduled to take place in Tokyo starting at the end of July. [575] The Japanese government has thus been taking extra precautions to help minimise the outbreak's impact. [576] The Japanese government and the International Olympic Committee have negotiated postponement of Summer Olympics until 2021. [577]

Criticism against Japanese government's responses

Foreign Policy and the Guardian reported that the diplomatic relations between Japan and South Korea worsened, as South Korea criticized Japan's "ambiguous and passive quarantine efforts". On 5 March, Japan announced that it would strengthen quarantine for new entrants from China and South Korea and add some areas of Iran to the target area. The Chinese authorities showed their understanding of the decision, but the Japanese media and South Korean government criticized it. The Japanese media said that the decision was too late because they were too careful with China, and the Korean government turned it into a political issue. [578] [579] [580] [581] [582]

Japan's Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare has been criticized for a perceived delayed response. Critics have observed that while Japan announced the first case of infection on 28 January, it took until 17 February for the Health Ministry to inform the public on how to reach public screening centers and 25 February, for the government to issue a "basic policy" on outbreak response.

The strict constraints on testing for the virus by Japanese health authorities have drawn accusations from critics such as Masahiro Kami, a hematologist and director of the Medical Governance Research Institute but not an infectious disease expert, towards Abe of wanting to "downplay the number of infections or patients because of the upcoming Olympics."[ citation needed ]

But the fact-checking in some media later reported to proved that it was fake news that 'the number of infected people was being reduced for the Olympics by the government.' [583] [584] Reports that only a small select number of public health facilities were authorized to test for the virus, after which the results could only be processed by five government-approved companies, has created a bottleneck where clinics have been forced to turn away even patients who had high fevers. This has led some experts to question Japan's official case numbers, with Tobias Harris, of Teneo Intelligence in Washington, D.C. stating "You wonder, if they were testing nearly as much as South Korea is testing, what would the actual number be? How many cases are lurking and just aren't being caught?" [585] [586] As mentioned above, there were many articles criticizing the small number of PCR tests in Japan compared to South Korea, mainly in the Japanese and Korean media. [587] [588] However, the number of PCR tests in Japan at that time was actually not small at all. According to data released by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare the Japanese authorities conducted PCR tests of 10,205 as of 13 and 15 March 655 as of 17 March, except for those returning from China by charter flight and passengers on the cruise ship. The number of tests in Japan appears to be small compared to 320,000 in China, 250,000 in South Korea, 86,000 in Italy, and 77,000 in Russia. However, only 30,000 in the UK, 16,000 in Taiwan, and the United States had a higher number of tests than Japan except for that four countries. In terms of population ratio, the ranking was lower, but the number of tests in Japan was still at the average level. [589] [590] [591]

The quarantine measures on the cruise ship Diamond Princess has also been criticised, even though there is no obligation under the international law to accept port calls for Japan and except for Japanese nationals on board, there is no obligation in Japan to treat all passengers, and the treatment is a good faith act, and the quarantine was the exercise of provisions in accordance with international and domestic laws. [592] But Kentaro Iwata, an infectious disease professor at Kobe University Hospital, said that "the condition aboard was completely chaotic" and "violating all infection control principles". Dr. Yoshihiro Takayama, a member of the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare who helped Iwata board the ship, said that Iwata had fight with DMAT members about his separate action and was forced to disembark in two hours, so he just looked around the lounge. [593] [594] A preliminary report by Japan's National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID) estimated that most of the transmission on the ship had occurred before the quarantine, based on the first 184 cases. [595] [596] On 22 February, the Health Ministry admitted that 23 passengers were disembarked without being properly tested for the virus. On 23 February, a Japanese woman who tested negative before disembarking from the cruise ship later tested positive after returning to her home in Tochigi Prefecture. She was not among the 23 passengers. Many passengers who were negative in the PCR test were tested positive after disembarking. [597] [598] [599] [600]

Philippines

The first COVID-19 death outside China occurred in the Philippines on 1 February. [601]

On 9 March 2020, President Rodrigo Duterte suspended classes in all levels in Metro Manila from 10 to 15 March. [602] The class suspension in Metro Manila was extended to 12 April, following the decision of concerned authorities to raise the COVID-19 alert level in the country to Code Red Sublevel 2. Work in the executive branch of the government was also suspended for the same period as part of the Stringent Social Distancing Measures in the National Capital Region (NCR), [603] with the directive for the concerned government agencies to form skeletal forces to ensure the delivery of basic services. Congress and the Judiciary were encouraged to do the same. Agencies providing law enforcement services, health services, and emergency services were enjoined to continue to operate at full capacity.[ citation needed ]

Other salient directives, contained in a resolution adopted by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) and announced by the Philippine President on 12 March, at the Heroes Hall in Malacañang Palace, [604] included, the prohibition of mass gatherings that could strain the resources of the host community, imposition of community quarantine over Metro Manila, and encouragement of flexible work arrangements for the private sector among others.[ citation needed ]

A memorandum containing the guidelines for stringent social distancing measures and the management of COVID-19 in the National Capital Region [605] was issued by Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea by order of the president on 13 March. Among the directives embodied in the memorandum were suspension of classes and all school activities until 14 April, prohibition of mass gatherings, imposition of strict social distancing during essential meetings and religious activities, and provisions for alternative and/or flexible work arrangements.[ citation needed ]

On 16 March, the president signed Proclamation No. 929 [606] declaring a state of calamity throughout the country for a period of six months, bringing into effect the price control of basic needs and commodities, granting of interest-free loans, distribution of calamity funds and hazard allowance for public health workers and government personnel in the fields of science and technology. [607]

President Duterte also placed the island of Luzon (including its associated islands) under enhanced community quarantine on 16 March [608] that further restricted the movement of people through the suspension of mass public transport and the closure of non-essential establishments. Business Process Outsourcing and export-oriented businesses were allowed to continue operation subject to certain conditions. Relevant government agencies were ordered to provide social amelioration measures. [609] Following the sharp increase of confirmed cases, President Duterte called Congress to a special session to "authorize the President to exercise powers necessary to carry out urgent measures to meet the current national emergency related to the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19)." [610]

South Korea

The first confirmed case of COVID-19 was identified with a 35-year-old Chinese woman on 20 January. The first South Korean national to be infected occurred three days later was a 55-year-old man who worked in Wuhan and returned for a checkup with flu symptoms. The two infection reports were publicly released on 24 January. The sixth patient was the first case in South Korea who had never visited Wuhan. The 56-year-old man caught the virus when visiting a restaurant with the third patient.[ citation needed ]

COVID-19 infection prevention tips banner in Seoul, South Korea Coronavirus Jongno 1.jpg
COVID-19 infection prevention tips banner in Seoul, South Korea

A woman, who had returned from Thailand after a five-day vacation, was tested positive and confirmed as the sixteenth case on 4 February. [611] Three more cases were confirmed on 5 February, bringing the total case count to 19. The seventeenth and nineteenth patients had attended a conference in Singapore and been in contact with an infected person there. [612] The very same day the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Korea (KCDC) announced that the second patient had been released from hospital after being tested negative in consecutive tests, becoming the country's first COVID-19 patient to fully recover. [613]

On 19 February, the number of confirmed cases increased by 20. On 20 February 70 new cases were confirmed, [614] giving a total of 104 confirmed cases, according to the KCDC. According to Reuters , KCDC attributed the sudden jump to 70 cases linked to "Patient No. 31", who had participated in a gathering in Daegu at the Shincheonji Church of Jesus the Temple of the Tabernacle of the Testimony. [614]

On 20 February, the streets of Daegu were empty in reaction to the Shincheonji outbreak. A resident described the reaction, stating "It's like someone dropped a bomb in the middle of the city. It looks like a zombie apocalypse." [614] The first death was reported [615] in a mental ward of Cheongdo Daenam Hospital in Cheongdo County. According to the mayor of Daegu, the number of suspected cases as of 21 February was 544 among 4,400 examined followers of the church. [616] The hospital was suspected as the source of the present outbreak after it was visited by a woman who became the second fatal case of Korea on that day. The infection spread outside via a funeral ceremony attended by members of the church. [617] [618]

All South Korean military bases were on lockdown after tests confirmed that three soldiers were indeed positive for the virus. [617] Airlines cut connections and cultural schedules were being cancelled due to fears of further spread. [619] [620] United States Forces Korea raised the alert level from low to moderate and cut off non-essential travel to and from USFK Daegu. [621] USFK Daegu's school facilities were closed and non-essential personnel were ordered to stay at home while any visitors going there were not allowed to enter. [621] USFK announced that the widow of a retired soldier who was in Daegu was diagnosed to be positive for the virus on 24 February. [622] Camp Humphreys enacted virus detection protocols, including temperature checks and raised the alert level to high. [623] On 26 February, an American soldier based at Camp Carroll was diagnosed to be positive and was quarantined away from bases via off-base housing unit [624] with contact tracing done that showed his movements to Camp Walker. [625]

The near-empty arrival hall of Seoul-Incheon International Airport in South Korea on 6 March Few people in arrival hall at Incheon International Airport Terminal 1 during the coronavirus outbreak 20200306 114257.jpg
The near-empty arrival hall of Seoul–Incheon International Airport in South Korea on 6 March

As of 22 February, among 9,336 followers of the church, 1,261 reported symptoms. [626] At the time, 169 confirmed cases involved the church and another 111 came from the Cheongdo Daenam Hospital. [627] 23 February saw another 123 cases with 75 being from Shincheonji [628] and 24 February saw 161 additional cases with 129 being from the religious group. Over 27,000 people have been tested for the virus with 19,127 negative results. [629]

On 24 February 15 countries imposed travel restrictions to and from South Korea. [630] It was also reported that a senior health official overseeing the COVID-19 efforts in Daegu tested positive and was also a member of Shincheonji. [631] [632] Within a few days, a petition to the nation's president urging for the disbandment of the church had over 750,000 signatures. Their headquarters in Gwacheon was raided by law enforcement; government officials said all 245,000 members of the religious group would be found and tested. [632] On 28 February, over 2,000 confirmed cases were reported, [633] rising to 3,150 on 29 February. [634]

On 8 March, KCDC in South Korea announced that 79.4% of confirmed COVID-19 cases were related to group infection. KCDC also announced that outbreak associated with Shincheonji Church totaled 4,482 infections, accounting for 62.8% of the total confirmed cases. [635] [636] 13 March was the first time since the outbreak on 20 January in which the number of recoveries, 177, was larger than the number of those who newly tested positive, 110. [637] [638] [639]

As infection rates have risen outside Korea leading to increases of sick arriving in the country (476 of 9,661 cases were imported as of 30 March), the KCDC implemented stronger infectious disease control measures for travelers coming from overseas as of 1 April. [640] By 9 April 2020, South Korea had about 10,423 cases and 204 deaths, [641] with over 494,711 people having been tested, a case fatality rate of 1.95%, which is lower than the WHO's global case fatality rate of 4.34%. [642]

Seeing the infodemic on COVID-19 information starting in China and spreading to Korea and the US, fake news researcher Cha Meeyoung of KAIST and the Institute for Basic Science, along with researchers from Ewha Womans University, started the multilingual Facts Before Rumors campaign to separate common claims seen online. [643] [644] [645] [646]

By 17 April, the KCDC stated that it knew of 163 patients who were said to have recovered, but again tested positive. The exact cause was not known but they stated several possibilities. [647] After several days with new infections numbering in the single digits (18, 20, 22 April), the government announced it was going to start lifting restrictions starting with stores, restaurants, gyms, cram schools, bars, and religious services; which is notable as most of the nation's infections came from places of worship. In coming weeks, arboretums, forests and national parks will begin to open with social distancing still in place until at least early May. After seeing Korea successfully lower cases of infection, President Moon Jae-in has engaged in "coronavirus diplomacy" with leaders of other nations, part of which involved exporting test kits to more than 20 countries. [648] On 26 April, confirmed patient number 31 in Daegu was discharged after 67 days. [649]

Criticism against South Korean government's responses

The Ministry of Health and Welfare has been criticized for unilaterally implementing telephone consultation and prescription without discussing with the Korea Medical Association, and for not restricting traffic from China despite several warnings from the association and a petition proposed by the society.[ citation needed ]

On 22 February, the South Korean government apologized for calling the virus "Daegu Corona 19" in an official report. The term has been widespread on social media and raises concerns about discrimination.[ citation needed ]

More than 1.5 million South Koreans have signed a petition to impeach President Moon Jae-in over what they claim is the government's mishandling of the outbreak. [650] On 6 March, the South Korean government has only entry restricted to Japanese citizens out of 102 countries that blocked Korea. The action has been widespread on social media and raises concerns about anti-Japanese discrimination. [651] [652]

Turkey

On 10 January 2020, ignoring China's insistence on the lack of evidence for human-to-human transmission, Ministry of Health experts stated that they suspected that SARS-CoV-2 was transmitted among people, and accordingly set up the Coronavirus Scientific Advisory Board. [653] 26 experts in infectious diseases and clinical microbiology originally comprised the Coronavirus Advisory Board, [654] which was subsequently enlarged to include five additional experts in intensive care medicine, internal medicine, and virology. [653] The board put forward voluntary recommendations while the government issued legal restrictions for businesses and public gatherings. [654] [655]

In the early hours of 11 March 2020 (UTC+03:00), the Minister of Health Fahrettin Koca announced that a Turkish man who had contracted the virus while travelling in Europe was the country's first confirmed COVID-19 case. [656] The patient had been placed in isolation at an undisclosed hospital, and family members of the patient were put under observation. [656]

On 12 March 2020, the Ministry of National Education announced that with the exception of schools catering to students with special needs, all schools [657] in Turkey would close starting on 16 March 2020. [658] Given the intense learning needs of students with disabilities, the Ministry of National Education announced that elementary-, middle- and high-school students with special needs will continue to have in-person attendance in fixed small groups, with adults rotating into the class, so as to facilitate contact tracing. [659] The Ministry of National Education subsequently announced that teachers and staff in schools for students with special needs are able to opt out of in-person teaching if they or their families have a health risk. [659]

On 17 March, Minister Selçuk stated that a subset of teachers are focusing on content generation for the national online platform on TRT EBA TV, which became functional on 23 March 2020, [660] with the rest of the teachers matched to students to provide individual assessment, coaching, and tutoring from 23 March to 31 May 2020. [661] [662] [663]

After the Ministry of National Education announced the closure of all schools [657] (except those catering to students with special needs) on 12 March 2020, the government acknowledged the impact of the closure of schools on the welfare of children. Noting that children with preexisting mental-health issues [664] or who live in non-supportive home environments are likely to suffer [664] from being out of school, the government announced emergency measures, including fund increases for foster children, expansion of the nutrition assistance program, direct payments to families, and a national moratorium on evictions. [664] To alleviate the social isolation of students, Minister Selçuk piloted a project on 27 March, where the Ministry of National Education started paying schools to offer small group activities for students on Mondays and Fridays, with deep cleaning sessions in between. [665]

On 21 March, the Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure a total curfew for those who are over the age 65 or chronically ill. [666] On 27 March, the Ministry of the Interior issued a new statement regarding gatherings during weekends, announcing that starting from 28 to 29 March, having picnics, fishing at the shores, doing physical exercise outside (including running and walking on the weekends in city and town centers) would be banned until the virus spread has been contained. It was also stated that, should they deem it necessary, local authorities may extend these new measures to weekdays. [667] Also on 27 March, President Erdoğan announced that all overseas flights were terminated, adding that intercity travel was subject to permission by the state governors, and that places such as picnic areas, forests and historical sites would be closed on the weekend. [668] On 3 April 2020, President Erdoğan announced a 15-day entry ban to 30 metropolitan municipalities as well as Zonguldak. Also, the curfew was extended to people younger than 20 years old. Using masks in public places became mandatory. [669]

Criticism against Turkish government's responses

The announced 100 billion economic measures package, set to be provided by the government, was criticized by institutions and individuals, including economists and politicians. The lack of a detailed action plan was the center of criticism. Additionally, at a time when people were encouraged to stay at home, the government was criticized for allowing airline passenger transport and tax reductions that support tourism. Critics asked for lowering the down payment of housing loans and emphasized on the need to provide employment support to different sectors. [670] [671]

The donation campaign initiated by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was supported by representatives of the ruling party, members of the oppositions had a less favorable reaction to it. [672] [673] After the government's decision to take money from the income of several institutions in order to make donations to this campaign, the Confederation of Public Employees' Unions filed a criminal complaint as a result of the salary cuts of the staff of many institutions such as MEB, BOTAŞ, General Directorate of Forestry, Ministry of Justice, Constitutional Court and Social Service Provincial Directorates. [674] Additionally, a similar donation campaign initiated by the metropolitan municipalities with CHP administration was terminated by the Ministry of the Interior and their bank accounts were blocked. Regarding this decision, the Ankara Bar Association issued a statement, saying: "Although the aforementioned circular and blocking process enforced by the Ministry of the Interior are clearly unlawful, the provision of social services belongs neither exclusively to the local governments nor to the central government." [675]

Other countries and territories

Europe

France

Empty streets in Paris, 2020

The earliest discovered infection came from an old sample collected on 27 December 2019. [676] [677] A superspreader event in the outbreak was the annual assembly of the Christian Open Door Church between 17 and 24 February. It was attended by about 2,500 people, at least half of whom were believed to have contracted the virus. [678] [679]

On 13 March, Prime Minister Édouard Philippe ordered the closure of "non-essential" public places, [680] and on 16 March, President Emmanuel Macron announced mandatory home confinement. [681]

Germany

At the end of January 2020, the first cases occurred in Bavaria in direct connection with the outbreak in Wuhan, China. After initial stagnation, several other cases were reported in different locations. During carnival in February, Heinsberg in Northrhine Westfalia was most affected, and case numbers steadily increased. By the second week of March, all federal states were affected and the first fatality was reported. [682] As of 28 March 2020 the incidence was highest in the city state of Hamburg, followed by Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria. [683] The Robert Koch Institute recommended an initial strategy of containment, until more cases would occur than could be traced back to a known case. The next phase of the epidemic, namely community transmission, was assumed to have begun first in Heinsberg, where a strategy of protection of vulnerable groups was adopted. [682]

Greece

On 26 February, the first case in Greece was confirmed, a 38-year-old woman from Thessaloniki who had recently visited Northern Italy. [684] Within the next days, health and state authorities issued precautionary guidelines and recommendations, while measures up to that point were taken locally and included the closure of schools and the suspension of cultural events in the affected areas (particularly Ilia, Achaea and Zakynthos). [685] Various municipalities around the country began disinfecting schools. [686] The Greek National Public Health Organization (NPHO), in collaboration with local authorities and doctors, is tracking and testing everyone who came in close contact with the confirmed carriers. [687] [688]

By 10 March, with 89 confirmed cases and no deaths in the country, [689] the government decided to suspend the operation of all schools, universities, daycare centers and all other educational establishments nationwide and then, on 13 March, to close down all cafes, bars, museums, shopping centres, sports facilities and restaurants in the country. [690] [691] On 16 March, all retail shops were also closed and all services in all areas of religious worship of any religion or dogma were suspended. Supermarkets, pharmacies, food outlets that offer take-away and delivery only, as well as some other businesses, remained open. [692] [693] On 18 and 19 March, the government announced a series of economic measures of more than 10 billion euros to support the economy, businesses and employees. [694]

On 22 March, the Greek authorities announced significant restrictions on all nonessential transport and movement across the country, starting from 6 a.m. on 23 March. Movement outside the house is permitted only for specific reasons that include moving to or from the workplace, shopping for food or medicine, going to the bank, visiting a doctor or assisting a person in need of help and walking a pet or exercising outside individually or in pairs. Citizens leaving their home are required to carry their police ID or passport, as well as some type of attestation depending on the purpose of travel. [695] All passenger flights to and from Italy, Spain, Albania, North Macedonia, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Germany are suspended until 15 May, [696] [697] and land borders with Albania, North Macedonia and Turkey are closed, with exemptions for cargo and sanitary transports, among others. [698] [699]

The measures put in place in Greece are some of the most proactive and strict in Europe and have been hailed internationally for slowing the spread of the disease and keeping the number of deaths among the lowest in Europe. [700] [701] [702]

Italy

Civil Protection volunteers carrying out health checks at the Guglielmo Marconi Airport in Bologna Emergenza coronavirus (49496308758).jpg
Civil Protection volunteers carrying out health checks at the Guglielmo Marconi Airport in Bologna

The outbreak was confirmed to have spread to Italy on 31 January 2020, when two Chinese tourists tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 in Rome. [703] In response, the Italian government suspended all flights to and from China and declared a state of emergency, with Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte stating that Italy is the first EU country to take this precautionary measure. [704] On 31 January, the Italian Council of Ministers appointed Angelo Borrelli, head of the Civil Protection, as Special Commissioner for the COVID-19 Emergency. [705] [706] An unassociated cluster of COVID-19 cases was later further detected starting with 16 confirmed cases in Lombardy on 21 February, [707] an additional 60 cases on 22 February, and Italy's first deaths reported on the same day.[ citation needed ]

The Ministry of Health announced new guidelines for reporting cases on 27 February in response to the previous blanket testing that caused case numbers to surge and inflamed public panic. [708] It would no longer report asymptomatic cases (swabs taken from patients which tested positive but were not showing symptoms) which counted as 40 to 50% of all reported cases at the time. These people would undergo isolation at home and would be followed up with new tests until they were negative. [709] [710]

On 22 February, the Italian Council of Ministers announced a new decree law to contain the outbreak, including quarantining more than 50,000 people from 11 different municipalities in northern Italy. [711] Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said "In the outbreak areas, entry and exit will not be provided. Suspension of work activities and sport events has already been ordered in those areas." [712] [713] Punishments for violating of the lockdown range from a fine of 206 euros to 3 months imprisonment. [714] Italian military and law enforcement agencies were instructed to secure and implement the lockdown. [715]

On 3 March, Chinese authorities reported that on 1 and 2 March, eight people who had returned to the county of Qingtian, in East China's Zhejiang province, had the virus. All eight appear to have acquired COVID-19 in the northern town of Bergamo, a virus-ravaged municipality, where they had worked at a restaurant, Qingtian officials said. Chinese authorities called these "backflow cases" — virus carriers who contract the disease outside China, then bring it back to their homeland. [716]

On 4 March, the Italian government ordered the full closure of all schools and universities nationwide as Italy reached 100 deaths. Additionally, all major sporting events, including Serie A football matches, would be held behind closed doors until April. [717] On 9 March, all sport was suspended completely for at least one month. [718]

On 21 February, at least ten towns in the Lombardy and Veneto regions of Italy, with a total population of 50,000, were locked down in quarantine procedure following an outbreak in Codogno in Lombardy. Police mandated a curfew closing all public buildings and controlling access through police checkpoints to the so-called 'red zone' which is enforced by penalties for violations ranging from a €206 fine to three months of imprisonment against trespassers who are not health or supply workers. [714] The government of Giuseppe Conte said that sending in the armed forces to enforce the lockdown was a possibility. [715] The governor of Basilicata, Vito Bardi, instituted a mandatory 14-day quarantine for people arriving from areas in northern Italy affected by the outbreak on 24 February. [719] On the same day, 500 extra police officers were assigned to patrol the quarantined areas in Lodi and Veneto. [719]

On the morning of 8 March 2020, Conte said that much of Italy's northern territories, including Milan and Venice, would be quarantined within their region. [720] Conte said the country was locking down all of the populous Lombardy region, with movement restrictions applying to about 16 million people. [721] This will be the most aggressive response taken in any region beyond China, and will paralyse the wealthiest parts of the country as Italy attempts to constrain the rapid spread of the disease. [721] On 8 March 2020, there have been 7,375 confirmed cases, and 366 deaths in Italy. [722]

On the evening of 9 March 2020, the quarantine was expanded to all of Italy. [723]

Criticism against Italian government's responses

Italy's government has drawn criticism from scientists and WHO, for its decision to suspend direct flights to mainland China that while sounding "tough" on paper, was ineffective as "people can still arrive from risk areas via indirect routes." Walter Ricciardi, professor of Hygiene and Public Health at the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore in Rome and a member of the European Advisory Committee on Health Research has said "Italy was wrong, closing flights from China is of no use when there are indirect ones."[ citation needed ]

Italy's government has also been criticised for not testing or enforcing lockdowns sufficiently in some regions, [724] sending mixed messages, [725] and downplaying the severity of the situation. [726] Criticism followed disclosures by Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte that protocols had not been followed at the hospital in Codogno, Lombardy that treated "patient 1" which "certainly contributed to the spread" of the virus in Italy, with Conte responding to inquiries by journalists on what protocol was broken with "This is not the time for controversy." In response to a statement by Conte that the central government may need to "revoke regional health policy powers," President of Lombardy Attilio Fontana called Conte's statement "fascist" and "talking nonsense."[ citation needed ]

On 8 March, plans by the government to quarantine 16 million people in Northern Italy were leaked early by a national newspaper, causing thousands of people to flee the region before it took place. Conte condemned the leak, calling it "unacceptable". [727]

Netherlands

Spain

On 31 January 2020, the first case was confirmed when a tourist tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 in La Gomera, Spain. [728] On 14 March, due to the increased number of cases, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez declared a state of alarm, placing all citizens in quarantine except for those working in healthcare or other vital activities, closing all non-critical businesses, and only allowing citizens to go outside for activities such as grocery shopping or walking a pet. [729]

Criticism against Spanish government's responses

Spanish government has received criticism for its perceived slow response to the pandemic, as it did not prevent any concentrations until 11 March when there already were 1,646 infected. [730] [731] The large march in Madrid for International Women's Day (8 March), which was attended by around 120,000 people received special criticism, as this event was promoted and attended by members of the government such as Irene Montero who was later confirmed to be infected. [732]

United Kingdom

The nature of devolution in the United Kingdom meant that each of the four countries of the UK had its own response to COVID-19 with different rules and restrictions at different times and many of the UK government actions only applying to England. [733]

On 24 March 2020, the United Kingdom brought in "some of the most far-reaching curbs on personal freedom ever introduced" in peacetime, including a three-week lockdown of the country. This included a ban on public gatherings of more than two people (excluding those one lives with) and the closing down of all non-essential businesses. [734]

Scotland

The first case of COVID-19 in Scotland was confirmed on 1 March [735] with the first death of someone with COVID-19 occurring 12 days later. [736] The following week, on 20 March, the Scottish government instructed a number of businesses to close, including pubs, cafes, cinemas and bingo halls. [737] On 21 May, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon outlined a four-phase "route map" for easing lockdown restrictions in Scotland to take effect from 28 May subject to the number of new cases of COVID-19 continuing to fall. [738]

Other countries and territories

North America

Costa Rica

Since the start of the pandemic, the Ministry of Health, together with the Government, were in charge of informing the general population through a daily press conference. By 6 March, the first confirmed case of COVID-19 is registered after several results obtained by INCIENSA (Costa Rican Institute of Research and Teaching in Nutrition and Health). The 49-year-old American woman was isolated, along with her husband in a San José lodging. There were 2 previous suspected cases under investigation. The positive patient arrived with her husband on Sunday, 1 March without symptoms, at the Juan Santamaría airport, they visited Alajuela and Puntarenas, so investigations were carried out from these areas to follow up on contacts, as well as 152 people traveling on the flight that brought them to the country. [739]

On 9 March, due to the nine confirmed cases of COVID-19, the Ministry of Health in coordination with the National Emergency Commission (CNE) reported that from 10 March, events and concentration activities are canceled massive, both free and paid, while teleworking for public institutions is instructed through the Presidential Directive. [740]

The President Carlos Alvarado and the Minister of Health, Daniel Salas announced, on 12 March, preventive closings to educational centers at risk, the reduction in 50% of the approved capacity of public meeting spaces and suspension of trips abroad for public employees. A telephone line is created for inquiries about COVID-19. [741]

On 15 March, the Ministry of Health made the decision to instruct a total lockdown placing all citizens in quarantine except for those working in healthcare and delivery restaurant and food services. The closure of bars, clubs and casinos and the amusement park was informed. By this date 35 confirmed cases of COVID-19 are registered in the nation. [742]

On 16 March, The Government declares a state of National Emergency, prevents the arrival of foreigners and lessons are suspended in all schools. Costa Ricans and residents who entered the country will have to carry out mandatory preventive isolation for 14 days. 41 cases are confirmed. [743]

The first death of a patient confirmed by COVID-19 is recorded by 18 March. This is an 87-year-old man who was hospitalized in intensive care at the Alajuela Hospital. [744]

By 31 March, were registered 8 in intensive care and 347 people were infected. 4 people recovered.

United States

On 28 January 2020, the federal government publicly released its approach to COVID-19 testing. [745] Despite this, the U.S. testing effort was slow, obscuring the extent of the outbreak. [746] [747] Many of the 160,000 test kits produced in February were found to be defective and were not used. [746] Academic laboratories, hospitals and private companies were not allowed to use their own tests until 29 February, when the FDA started issuing approvals for them. [746] Initially, there were eligibility restrictions for receiving a COVID-19 test (based on recent international travel, hospitalization for respiratory illness, or contact with another person already diagnosed with COVID-19). By 27 February 2020, fewer than 4,000 tests had been conducted in the United States. [746] On March 5, 2020, the CDC relaxed its restrictions, allowing doctors to decide whom to test; [747] a week later, nearly 14,000 tests had been performed. [748] Federal funding was used to run 41 "community-based testing sites" (CBTS), but the federal government said it would stop this funding on 10 April; as a result of that decision, some of these testing sites were expected to close, shifting demand to hospitals. Those that remain open will likely be funded by states. [749]

On 31 January 2020, President Donald Trump issued a proclamation limiting entry into the United States, as immigrants or nonimmigrants, of all aliens who were physically present within the People's Republic of China, excluding the Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau, during the 14-day period preceding their entry or attempted entry into the United States. [750]

The first six confirmed deaths in the United States were reported in late February 2020 in the Pacific Northwest state of Washington. By 8 March 2020, there were 22 U.S. deaths and over 500 reported cases. [751] A month later, on 8 April, there were 14,000 U.S. deaths and over 430,000 reported cases. [752]

The U.S. federal government's health inspectors surveyed 323 hospitals in late March, reporting "severe shortages" of test supplies, "widespread shortages" of PPE, and other strained resources due to extended patient stays while awaiting test results. [753] [754]

Other countries and territories

Oceania

Fiji

At the beginning of February, the Government of Fiji announced a travel ban to China. [755] As the disease started spreading to other countries, Fiji extended the travel ban to Italy, Iran and South Korea. [756]

However, on 19 March, Fiji confirmed its first case of COVID-19 in Lautoka. [757] As a precautionary measure, the Government of Fiji announced the lockdown of the city until 7 April 2020 [758] and the travel ban was further extended to the United States and the whole of Europe including the United Kingdom. [759] On 26 March, the country closed its main international airport in Nadi and all local shipping services was ceased. [760] Later on 2 April, the Government announced a lockdown of Suva, after confirmed cases in the capital. [761]

As the cases rose, Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama announced a nationwide curfew from 8pm to 5am and social gatherings was banned. Schools and non-essential services was closed and the public was advised to stay at home and practice good hygiene. [762]

New Zealand

On 28 January, the Ministry of Health set up the National Health Coordination Centre (NHCC) in response to the outbreak. On 3 February, the New Zealand Government announced that foreign travellers who left from China would be denied entry to New Zealand, with only New Zealand citizens and permanent residents and their family being allowed to enter.

New Zealand confirmed its first case of COVID-19 on 28 February, a New Zealand citizen in his 60s who had recently visited Iran. The travel ban was extended to include Iran on the same day.

17 March: Health Minister David Clark announced that the Government would deport foreign tourists who flout self-quarantine restrictions. Immigration New Zealand placed two foreign tourists into forced quarantine for defying Government requirements to self-quarantine for two weeks. Finance Minister Grant Robertson announced a NZ$12.1 billion COVID-19 business package. Logan Park High School in Dunedin closed for 48 hours after one of its students tested positive for COVID-19

18 March: The Royal New Zealand Returned and Services' Association announced that all Anzac Day services, scheduled for 25 April, would be cancelled.

19 March: The government required the cancellation of mass indoor events with more than 100 people. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced the closure of New Zealand's borders to all but New Zealand citizens and residents, with effect after 11:59 pm on Thursday night.

21 March: Local councils in New Zealand's main centres announced the closures of public facilities including swimming pools, libraries, recreation centres, community centres, art galleries, and museums.

23 March: Prime Minister Ardern raised the COVID-19 alert level from two to three and announced the closure of all schools beginning on that day. The Government also announced that they would raise the national alert level to four at 11:59pm on 25 March, which would lead to a nationwide lockdown, for a period of four weeks. While all sporting matches and events as well as non-essential services such as pools, bars, cafes, restaurants, playgrounds are required to close in 48 hours, essential services such as supermarkets, petrol stations, and health services will remain open. [763]

8 June: New Zealand lifts all domestic restrictions from COVID-19 after reporting no new cases for over two weeks. However, entry to New Zealand remained restricted. [764]

16 June: The country gets new cases of COVID after two women returned to New Zealand from the UK after they were given an exemption to travel. In response, David Clark suspended compassionate exemptions. [765]

Other countries and territories

South America

Brazil

Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro has been criticized due to "lax handling" of the outbreak and after calling it a "fantasy". [766] His lack of action has also prompted many protests across the country since 18 March 2020. [767] [768] Days before, on 15 March, Bolsonaro received harsh criticism after attending a pro-government demonstration in Brasília on which he had physical contact with more than two hundred people, against the recommendations of his own Minister of Health. [769] [770] Following the event, the president of the Brazilian Chamber of Deputies, Rodrigo Maia, said that Bolsonaro's acts were an "attack on public health", going against his own government guidelines, while Davi Alcolumbre, president of the Brazilian Senate, classified Bolsonaro's behaviour as "inconsequential". [771] The Brazilian Ministry of Health has also been criticized for not providing enough test kits, which may muddle the efforts to contain the outbreak in the country. [772] [773]

Other countries and territories

Debate

The response to the pandemic has resulted in unprecedented expansion of government power. Advocates of small government worry that the state will be reluctant to give up that power once the crisis is over, as has often been the case historically. [774]

See also

Notes

    Related Research Articles

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