Indonesia announces emergency measures to rein in worst COVID-19 outbreak in Southeast Asia

The world's fourth most populous country is facing a surge in COVID-19 cases, with 21,807 new infections recorded on Wednesday.

Relatives react after a COVID-19 victim is buried at a public cemetery in South Tangerang, Indonesia, on 27 June, 2021.

Relatives react after a COVID-19 victim is buried at a public cemetery in South Tangerang, Indonesia, on 27 June, 2021. Source: Xinhua News Agency via Getty Images

Indonesia will bring in emergency measures running until 20 July aimed at containing an exponential spike in coronavirus cases that has strained the country's medical system, President Joko Widodo has said.

There has been a near vertical climb in virus cases in the world's fourth most populous nation in recent weeks, prompting health experts to warn that the outbreak could be as bad as India's devastating second wave if tighter measures are not introduced.

"With cooperation from all of us and the grace of God, I'm certain that we can suppress COVID-19 transmission and restore people's lives quickly," the president said on Thursday as he announced the stricter measures.



The measures, which will start on Saturday, aim to halve the current number of daily virus cases to below 10,000, and include tighter restrictions on movement and air travel, a ban on restaurant dining and closure of non-essential offices, according to a government document.

They will be applied on the most populous island of Java and on the tourist island of Bali. Further details of the measures will be announced by Indonesia's minister for maritime affairs and investment, Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, later on Thursday, officials said.

Grappling with the worst outbreak in Southeast Asia, Indonesia has reported a series of record daily COVID-19 cases since mid-June, with 21,807 new cases on Wednesday being its biggest daily increase.

Indonesia has recorded 2,178,272 cases overall, among the highest number in Asia, and 58,491 deaths.
Health workers treat patients infected with COVID-19 in emergency tents set up in a hospital yard in Bogor City, West Java Province, Indonesia.
Health workers treat patients infected with COVID-19 in emergency tents set up in a hospital yard in Bogor City, West Java Province, Indonesia. Source: Cover Images
Up until now, the president has been reluctant to bring in measures that might hit the economy, and news of the curbs wiped out gains on Indonesia's main stock index that had earlier been up as much as 0.9 per cent. 

The highly contagious Delta variant that caused a spike in cases in India in April and May, overwhelming healthcare facilities and swamping crematoriums, is spreading in Indonesia.

Hospitals across the crowded, main island of Java are being pushed to the brink. In Jakarta, some emergency wards have been moved to tents erected in hospital car parks to free up isolation rooms, while residents have formed queues to buy oxygen tanks for relatives being treated at home.

The bed occupancy rate in the city's hospitals hit 93 per cent this week, with hospitals across Java also edging toward full capacity.

'Emergency by name only'

But public health experts have questioned whether the proposed measures go far enough.

"The current proposals are 'emergency' by name only, but they don't respond to an emergency situation," said Dr Dicky Budiman, an epidemiologist at Griffith University in Queensland.

From outside Java, others experts questioned how effective the selective emergency measures would be.

"If the government is half-hearted it will just remain the same," said Defriman Djafri, an epidemiologist at Andalas University in Padang on Sumatra island.

What was needed, he said, was two weeks in total lockdown, no outside activities and no contact, with people ordered to stay at home.
Gravediggers prepare to bury more bodies at a cemetery designated for victims of the COVID-19 coronavirus in Semarang, Indonesia, on 30 June, 2021.
Gravediggers prepare to bury more bodies at a cemetery designated for victims of the COVID-19 coronavirus in Semarang, Indonesia, on 30 June, 2021. Source: AFP
Rather than implement a national lockdown, Indonesia has instead opted for localised restrictions in designated "red zones", a move the president previously said was designed to avoid "killing" the economy.

As tougher restrictions are expected to be announced, Mercy Corps Indonesia has expressed concern over the already "dire situation".

“Hospitals are overflowing, around one in five tests in Indonesia are reportedly coming back positive, and we’re experiencing more deaths now than at any point of the pandemic so far,” said Ade Soekadis, Mercy Corps’ country director for Indonesia.

"Worryingly, as we’ve seen in India and Nepal, we know it’s only going to get worse."


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4 min read
Published 1 July 2021 12:24pm
Updated 22 February 2022 2:01pm
Source: Reuters, SBS


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