Peru is going to lift coronavirus or COVID-19 lockdown measures in most areas of the nation, including the capital Lima, at the start of July, while keeping the borders closed, after the daily number of cases slowed in recent days, the government mentioned late on Friday.
A night curfew will be imposed, as per a government decree, as officials target to keep the pandemic under control while it struggles with a battered economy and a near-collapse of its health system.
Peru to Lift COVID-19 Lockdown Measures
Children under the age of 14 and people older than 65 will still be required to quarantine, the government said. Peru was one of the first countries in Latin America to impose a quarantine in mid-March to stem infections and has extended it several times until the end of June. Since May, the government has allowed a gradual reopening of the economy.
Lockdown in Lima, where just under a third of Peru's 33 million people live, will be lifted from July. Under the new rules, banks and supermarkets will reopen allowing in customers to 50 percent of capacity, with mandatory use of masks and social distancing of one meter. The government is also considering allowing restaurants and domestic land and air transport to reopen with limited capacity.
The government will maintain the quarantine in seven regions including Arequipa, the second most populous in the country, and others located in the center of the country and in parts of the Amazon jungle, where the levels of infection are still high. Peru has recorded 272,364 coronavirus cases, with 8,939 deaths., according to the Ministry of Health.
(With agency inputs)