Global pandemic

Bogotá to impose lockdown as Covid-19 cases rise in Colombia

A third wave of coronavirus in Colombia has led to a tightening of sanitary policies, including the implementation of a three-day lockdown in the capital Bogotá over the weekend.

A waiter sits at one of the restaurant tables that block a street during a protest by the sector against the measures taken by the national government to prevent the spread of COVID-19, in Cali, Colombia, on April 5, 2021. Foto: LUIS ROBAYO / AFP

Eight million inhabitants of Bogotá will be put under strict lockdown from Saturday, mayor Claudia López said as the Colombian city battles a third wave of the coronavirus pandemic.

"This weekend, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, we are all going to stay at home... In all of Bogotá, only strictly essential activities will be allowed," Lopez said in a video posted on Twitter Monday.

A third wave of Covid-19 had already started and it depended on people's behaviour whether they could get it under control, the mayor warned in a statement, adding that the restrictions could be extended next week.

The measures are in addition to night curfews imposed the day before by the government that cover seven million people in the cities of Medellín, Cali, Barranquilla and Santa Marta, where the health system is overwhelmed by the virus.

Since the end of March, Colombian authorities have imposed and tightened nighttime restrictions in an effort to stop a new outbreak. 

However, infections and deaths have continued to rise and there is concern about the effect of the Easter holidays, traditionally a popular time to travel in Colombia.

The South American country has so far administered at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine to 2.4 million of its 50 million inhabitants.

Colombia has the second-most cases in Latin America at more than 2.4 million, behind Brazil, and the third most deaths (64,293), after its giant neighbour and Mexico.

— TIMES/AFP