Irish minister confident of easing COVID curbs from February
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[January 12, 2022]
DUBLIN
(Reuters) -Ireland should be in a position to start easing restrictions
to slow the spread of COVID-19 from next month once the number of people
requiring critical care remains stable, a senior minister said on
Wednesday. |
Ireland's Minister for Transport, Climate, Environment and
Communications Eamon Ryan poses for a photograph after an interview with
Reuters in his office, ahead of his trip to COP26, in Dublin, Ireland,
October 28, 2021. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File Photo |
Ireland has the second highest incidence rate of COVID-19 in
Europe but also one of the continent's highest uptake of booster
vaccines, helping keep the number of patients in intensive care
stable and well below the peak of previous waves of the disease.
The cabinet agreed on Wednesday to scrap the isolation period
for boosted people who have been in close contact with someone
testing positive for COVID-19 and Communications Minister Eamon
Ryan said he hoped to offer companies further respite next
month.
"I am very confident we will be able to ease restrictions as we
go into February. The science says that this will be a short
wave, if we can get through it with our hospital numbers down,
then we will be able to start lifting restrictions," Ryan, the
leader of the junior coalition Green Party, told reporters.
The government shut nightclubs and cut capacity at indoor events
in early December before widening the constraints on crowds and
ordering bars and restaurants to close at 8 p.m. two weeks later
as the Omicron variant spread rapidly.
Deputy Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said on Tuesday that
restrictions would likely be eased on a phased basis. Previously
the government has lifted the most recently imposed curbs first
and further reopened the economy every two to three weeks.
(Reporting by Padraic Halpin;Editing by Alison Williams)
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