Thursday, 21 January 2021

Enough avoidable deaths. Mandatory Quarantine is 10 months overdue:.."Rather than quarantining incomers in a hotel for two weeks, our Government opted to quarantine five million Irish citizens in our homes, indefinitely, instead"

 Today's Indo article on Mandatory quarantine:

https://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/mandating-quarantine-and-border-checks-has-got-to-be-top-of-martins-covid-agenda-39993589.html

Highlights:

Micheál Martin claims that he had followed NPHET’s advice all along. Not so. He has persistently diluted their advice. The most important, yet under reported aspect of that advice which hasn’t changed since the outset, is that of mandatory quarantine. Instead, Ireland opted for a “careful now” approach which saw 140,000 people enter the country between 11 December and 3 January, half of whom refused to tell officials where they were staying.

On 14 January, as reports emerged of two new Brazilian variants, the WHO’s Mike Ryan warned that some countries could be ‘in serious trouble’ if new variants change the rules of the game. Having already imported the South-African and UK variants (which are significantly more transmissible), it’s crucial that the coalition heeds this warning. According to Science Magazine, new evolving variants risk undermining the efficacy of the vaccine, which makes mandatory quarantine and the swift roll out of the vaccine absolutely vital.

Transport minister Eamon Ryan’s response has been characteristically lacklustre. Last week, he introduced PCR testing for international travellers (something most countries did months ago), despite NPHET warning that they’re not suitable for use in screening asymptomatic people, such as arriving passengers, and that they should therefore be used in conjunction with mandatory quarantine. On Friday, RTE reported that, since travel restrictions from South-Africa and the UK came into effect on January 9th, some 80 passengers refused to produce a PCR test, yet were still permitted entry.

Human rights are interdependent. Therefore, the right to freedom of movement is not absolute. Article 12(3) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights allows restrictions on the right to freedom of movement for reasons of public health and national emergency where quarantine is required to limit the spread of a deadly disease.

Rather than quarantining incomers in a hotel for 2 weeks, our government opted to quarantine 5 million Irish citizens in our homes – indefinitely - instead.

When the government finally admitted that mandatory quarantine wasn’t illegal, they still refused to implement it. In July, Simon Coveney said that the government had considered NPHET’s advice on mandatory quarantine but that “we don’t regard it as an approach that makes sense from an Irish perspective”. I defy Mr Coveney to explain how 176,839 Covid-19 cases and 2,708 deaths makes sense from any perspective?

Contrast our losses with countries that enforced strict mandatory quarantine early on. New Zealand: population 5m, 25 deaths. Thailand: population 63m, 71 deaths. Taiwan: population 23m, 7 deaths.

Jacinda Ardern shut New Zealand’s borders in March before any deaths were recorded to prevent the virus taking hold. She said she would not countenance herd immunity because it risked killing thousands of New Zealanders saying, “I’m not willing to tolerate that”. With Ireland drowning in chaos and grief, how many more deaths is Micheál Martin prepared to tolerate before mandating quarantine?

Whether by accident or design, Ireland’s handling of covid-19 unnervingly resembles a herd immunity policy and criminal negligence.

 

Northern Ireland has much been cited as an excuse for not restricting movement on the island or between the UK. Yet, at various times in the pandemic, Wales and Scotland banned visitors from England and Northern Ireland on public health grounds. Plus, if border checks could be deployed to stop the spread of foot and mouth in 2001, why can’t it be done to protect lives in a pandemic?

Asked by the Irish Mirror who would be responsible for increased deaths after the government rejected NPHET’s advice in October, Stephen Donnelly responded, “The virus is responsible”. If you accept power you don’t get to evade responsibility.

If Micheál martin and his ministers are not ashamed of Ireland’s death toll, it’s not because they’re blameless: it’s because they’re shameless.


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