A cabinet member tests positive for Covid-19, prompting ministers to restrict movements



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A Cabinet member tested positive for Covid-19, the Government announced.

According to public health councils, all ministers are now restricting their movements while waiting for a coronavirus test and result.

The identity of the cabinet member has not been released.

On the other hand, people who have arrived in Ireland from Great Britain as of December 11 will have to eat their Christmas dinner alone in their room, a senior figure from HSE has confirmed.

The Government announced yesterday that it had updated its advice for people who have traveled from England, Scotland or Wales to Ireland since 8 December.

The new council asks people to isolate themselves in their room, rather than simply restricting their movements, for 14 days from the date of their arrival in Ireland.

Christmas dinner

On RTÉ’s Morning Ireland program, HSE Clinical Director Dr. Colm Henry was asked if that meant that people who had arrived since December 11 had to dine in their room.

“Sadly, it means isolation in your room,” he said.

“I appreciate … not only how inconvenient this is, but how painful it is for the people who have waited so long to go home.”

Explaining the concept of self-isolation, he said that meant staying in his room as much as possible, except for essential purposes. Those who have returned should remain in their room to ensure they are not the means of transmitting this much more transmittable version of the virus, he added.

He said positive cases had been identified in people who had arrived from Britain.

It was estimated that more than 30,000 people had arrived from Great Britain. When asked how many had tested positive, Dr. Henry said the numbers were not available to date, but that “enhanced surveillance” was underway.

Referring to the new Covid-19 strain found in southern England recently, he said that perhaps it was inevitable that it would be in Ireland and people should act as if they were already here.

Dr Henry said that self-isolation was no longer a novelty “in our collective national experience”, as many people in Ireland had self-isolation of late.

Painful

“It is difficult, it is painful, but we have learned at our expense … that the delay in taking measures to prevent the spread, the transmission of the virus, we will pay if we do.”

The self-isolation requirement includes people who have had a negative test, the HSE said, as these people could still be developing symptoms and pose a potential risk to others.

Senior government figures fear that if there is a widespread infection here with the new Covid-19 variant that has been detected in the UK, existing restrictions will be insufficient and a strict lockdown will be needed to stop the spread of the virus.

This could bring the country back to restrictions imposed last March, sources fear.

While Taoiseach Micheál Martin stressed yesterday that schools would open as planned in January, sources say the position would have to be revised if case growth accelerates to the point where thousands of new cases are reported each day.

970 new cases were announced last night, and that number is expected to exceed 1,000 today.

Tánaiste Leo Varadkar also said that the nonessential retail situation, which is currently allowed to remain open, would be reviewed if the number of cases continued to increase rapidly.

There is growing alarm in the government that cases will skyrocket in the next few days, after public health officials told ministers yesterday that cases are increasing by 10 percent a day.

Ministers were told on Monday that the growth rate was 6.5 percent, but yesterday senior officials from the National Public Health Emergency Team corrected it and told ministers that it was now 10 percent.

The Health Minister said yesterday at the cabinet meeting that they could be analyzing 1,900 new cases a day in a week, assuming the growth rate did not increase significantly.

Nphet is scheduled to meet today to consider the latest trends and will subsequently provide advice to the government. Sources expect the group to recommend that nonessential retail be closed and that the country adopt the full level five restrictions.

Speaking on RTÉ’s Today with Claire Byrne show Wednesday morning, Mr. Martin called the new variant a “game changer”.

Meanwhile, Transport Minister Eamon Ryan has defended the pacing of the vaccination program and the latest round of Covid-19 restrictions, saying the goal was to provide time for the vaccine to roll out and thereby protect the country.

A sure January was “our resolution,” Ryan said Wednesday morning. However, he cautioned that it would take time to distribute the vaccine.

Ryan’s comments come a day after it was announced that the state will enter its third lockdown on Thursday, Christmas Eve, as a series of restrictions will take effect between then and the new year in an attempt to control the floods. levels of Covid-19 infections.

“We need to minimize the damage,” Ryan told RTÉ’s Morning Ireland.

The government will continue to monitor and review the situation, but cannot give “false expectations” that this will be a short three-week period of restrictions, he said.

“In all likelihood it will have to continue until we are in a safer place,” he said.

“Everything we’re doing is evidence-based,” he said of the decision to allow nonessential retail to remain open. “We don’t see any signs of transmission from the retail sector.”

Ryan said the industry had operated “very carefully” to date and also provided 40,000 jobs.

There was also no evidence of gymnasium cases that were important as they gave people the ability to maintain their physical and mental health.

However, Ryan said that if the numbers associated with the retail sector started to rise, the government would have to review the situation.

“We have to pay attention to public health advice,” he told the program.

All the island

Meanwhile, Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald repeated calls for an all-island approach to Covid restrictions.

When asked on RTÉ’s Morning Ireland whether stores in the Republic should remain closed after Christmas, as will be the case in Northern Ireland, Ms McDonald said: “Well yeah, our central premise is that to keep anyone of us safe on this island, we have to keep everyone safe. I thought it was a matter of basic common sense, that on a small island with a relatively small population mass, we are a single unit for public health purposes. “

When asked again if nonessential retail in the Republic should be closed as of Saturday, Ms McDonald said that “from the beginning” (of the pandemic) she had been calling on the “Dublin government” to spearhead a approach to all islands.

“I support Dublin and Belfast to act together and have the single all-island approach that we need to keep people safe,” he said.

Regarding the reopening of the schools (North and South), Ms. McDonald said that the schools would have to open safely and the situation would have to be assessed closer to the date they were to reopen.

McDonald expressed disappointment that the Northern Executive had not decided to stop flights from the UK. “We will push again for this matter,” and he hoped the Taoiseach would assist Sinn Féin in this effort.

The party leader said she supported the reimposed restrictions (in the Republic), but said the guidance was “useless” unless the restrictions were “properly enforced and monitored.”

The “north and south” test-and-trace systems had to be strengthened, otherwise they would leave the public “always vulnerable.”

Restrictions

Taoiseach Micheál Martin announced the restrictions Tuesday in a televised speech from the steps of government buildings after the cabinet approved the measures.

As expected, bars and restaurants will close starting Thursday, as will hair salons and beauty salons. The government has pledged that schools and nurseries will reopen as planned after Christmas, and retail outlets will be allowed to remain open, although they will be told not to hold sales after Christmas or January.

The gyms, leisure centers and swimming pools will remain open and you can continue training outdoors. But sports matches cannot be held apart from elite ones.

Inter-county travel will be banned from St. Stephen’s Day, but people who have already traveled for Christmas will not be asked to return home. However, once they return home from their visit, no further inter-county trips can be made.

Home visits by members of two households may continue until December 26, but will then be reduced to a single household. After January 1, home visits will be completely prohibited.

Later, Tánaiste Leo Varadkar said that although the decisions would be reviewed in mid-January, people could expect the shutdown to last until early March.

Another 970 new cases of the virus and another 13 deaths were registered on Wednesday.

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