Mexico City suburbs back to lockdown due to high incidence of contagion

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After weeks of resisting to avoid further hurting the economy, officials announced Friday that Mexico City and surrounding Mexico State will ban all non-essential activities and return to a partial lockdown because of a spike in coronavirus cases that has crowded hospitals.

Residents of the capital and its suburbs will not be banned from moving about freely, but restaurants will be closed except for take-out services, many stores will be closed and cultural activities will be cancelled.

People eat at tables set up on the sidewalk outside Pizzería Zaza in Mexico City, Friday, Dec. 18, 2020. After months of resisting to avoid hurting the economy, officials announced Friday that Mexico City and the surrounding State of Mexico will ban all non-essential activities and return to a partial lockdown starting Dec. 19 because of a spike in coronavirus cases. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Authorities gave differing figures on how full hospitals are. Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said 75% of hospital beds were full, but federal authorities put the number at 80%.

Mexico has never had a total lockdown but did enact shutdowns like the measures announced Friday during the first spike of the pandemic in the spring.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador opposes lockdowns and compulsory face-mask rules, and has called them “dictatorship.”

But with families reporting agonizing, hours-long searches for open hospital beds in the city of 9 million — the greater metropolitan area has 21 million inhabitants — it became clear that something had to be done, as cases spiked while throngs of people hit the streets to do Christmas shopping.

Sheinbaum and Mexico State Gov. Alfredo Del Mazo acknowledged that the partial shutdown, which will go into effect Saturday and may last through Jan. 10, will be a painful break with Mexico’s traditional family-centered holiday celebrations.

Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum (Archive)

Sheinbaum told city residents “do not hold parties, do not hold gatherings,” but announced no specific plans to prevent them from doing so.

Mexico has seen more than 1.3 million confirmed coronavirus cases nationwide, with 117,248 deaths related to COVID-19 by tests. But due to the low level of testing, authorities acknowledge the real death toll is probably closer to 150,000.

Source: Associated Press

The Mexico City Post