Taiwan raises coronavirus alert level in the wake of 180 new domestic infections

Taiwan raises coronavirus alert level in the wake of 180 new domestic infections
A recent small rise in community transmissions has spooked residents in Taiwan.
PHOTO: Reuters

TAIPEI (REUTERS) - Taiwan raised its coronavirus alert level on Saturday (May 15) in the capital, Taipei, and the city around it, bringing curbs for a period of two weeks that will shut many venues and restrict gatherings in the wake of 180 new domestic infections.  

The new rules will not mean offices, schools or restaurants have to close, but will cause the shutdown of cinemas and other entertainment spots, while limiting family get-togethers to five people indoors and 10 outdoors.  

For the first time, masks will have to be worn outdoors. Taipei’s government has already ordered bars, nightclubs and similar venues to shut.  

Health Minister Chen Shih-chung said a “level of risk” in certain hot spots, such as Taipei’s gritty Wanhua district, had spurred the decision to raise the alert level.  

“Only by doing this can infections be dealt with and controlled,” he told reporters.  

[[nid:528961]]

The rising community infections unnerved the stock market this week, but at the same news conference, Premier Su Tseng-chang reiterated that the island’s economic fundamentals remain good.  

Taiwan has millions of vaccine doses on order from Moderna Inc and AstraZeneca Plc, though only a small number have arrived from the latter. More vaccines will start arriving next month, President Tsai Ing-wen has said.  

Since the pandemic began, Taiwan has reported fewer than 1,500 cases among a population of about 24 million, most of them imported from abroad, but a recent rise in community transmissions has spooked residents.  

The island has never gone into a full lockdown and its people are used to life carrying on near normal, despite the pandemic ranging in many other parts of the world.  

Late on Friday, several universities, including the elite National Taiwan University, said they would immediately switch to remote learning, telling students to stay away from campuses. 

Museums in Taipei said they would shut too, including the National Palace Museum, home to one of the world’s best and most extensive collections of Chinese art.

This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.