The pressure on the failure of the tracking system intensifies as the State enters Level 5



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The severe restrictions on business and social life came into effect for the second time this year at midnight on Wednesday, when political pressure on the government intensified over a failure in the Covid tracking system.

The restrictions, which will be in effect for the next six weeks and are among the most severe in Europe, will be enforced by new powers for gardaí that are expected to take effect next week, according to the government.

Thousands of commercial premises and other businesses closed their doors Wednesday night, while hundreds of thousands of workers will now be required to work from home starting Thursday.

Amid criticism from the opposition, both Taoiseach Micheál Martin and Health Minister Stephen Donnelly admitted that they learned of the tracking failure only when they read The Irish Times story published Tuesday night.

The Irish Times reported that thousands of close contacts of positive Covid-19 cases over a three-day period would not be contacted by the HSE because the contact tracing system was overwhelmed with cases last weekend. Instead, the HSE asked 2,000 to 2,500 people who had tested positive for Covid on Wednesday to tell their close contacts to contact their GPs immediately to request a test.

More tensions

On Wednesday night, in a sign of new tensions between politicians and officials, Tánaiste Leo Varadkar told Fine Gael TDs that it was “very unfair” for the HSE to “turn” the responsibility of resolving the tracking controversy onto general practitioners.

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