Mexico begins lifting Covid-19 lockdown despite fears worst is still to come
Local authorities across Mexico have resisted
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s call to lift emergency coronavirus
measures in municipalities without confirmed Covid-19 cases, warning that the
pandemic is far from over.
Mexico has registered nearly 50,000 Covid-19 cases
and more than 5,000 deaths, and its testing rate ranks among the lowest in
Latin America, with just 0.4 tests per 1,000 people.
But on Monday, approximately 300 municipalities
throughout the country – called “municipalities of hope” – were given the green
light to restart economic activities and lift sheltering-in-place
recommendations. Similar measures are scheduled to start 1 June in the rest of
the country, while classes will resume the same day.
“We need to maintain discipline, not relax this
discipline since we’re almost there,” said López Obrador, commonly called Amlo.
“I have a lot of faith and many expectations that we’re going to finish taming
this pandemic.”
The decision to resume comes amid questions over the
Amlo administration’s coronavirus response, which has depended heavily on
disease modeling and involved little testing and no contact tracing.
Mexico has also come under pressure from the United
States to reopen its economy as factories near the border form important links
in continental supply chains. Companies wanting to resume construction, mining
and manufacturing activities could apply for permission starting Monday, Amlo
said.
But the move to reopen the economic comes amid an
ongoing row over the scale of Mexico’s coronavirus crisis. Amlo has been
infuriated by a string of stories in foreign media outlets alleging that his
government has undercounted Covid-19 deaths.
Amlo returned to the theme at his daily press
conference on Monday, accusing international media of wanting to damage his
government and spreading disinformation.
Physicians and public health experts express
disquiet that the country is opening too quickly and the model used to guide
Mexico’s Covid-19 response is unable to produce granular information for
knowing which municipalities to open.
“We’re at the peak and this peak could last a week
or two weeks or who knows how long. It remains to be seen,” said Asisclo de
Jesús Villagómez a former president of Mexico’s college of critical care
medicine.
“I think they should be taking measures for when
things reopen, but not putting a date on it.”
“We’re flying blind,” added Xavier Tello, a
physician and healthcare consultant. He said Mexico only tests suspected
Covid-19 cases if symptoms are severe – something producing low coronavirus
statistics.
Still, the coronavirus tsar, Hugo López-Gatell, has
insisted that “the curve is flattening” and Amlo has told the country “we’re
seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.”
A poll published on Monday by the Reforma newspaper
found 67% of respondents believed the “worst is yet to come” with Covid-19,
while 68% said people were already casting aside practices like social
distancing and staying at home.
The 324 municipalities scheduled to reopen were
chosen if there were no recorded Covid-19 cases over the previous 28 days and cases
were not rising in neighbouring municipalities.
Analysts found flaws in the selection process,
however; no Covid-19 tests were carried out in two-thirds of the municipalities
reopening, according to an investigation by Valería Moy, director of the NGO
México, ¿Cómo Vamos?
Many of the chosen municipalities are also small and
isolated and among the most marginalised in Mexico. More than 200 of the
municipalities set to reopen in Oaxaca are governed by traditional rules known
as “uses and customs” which are common in indigenous communities.
The governors of Jalisco and Chihuahua states said
municipalities there would remain closed to conform with statewide Covid-19
restrictions. Local officials in Oaxaca and Guerrero states also seemed
unwilling to reopen.
“With the arrival of the Covid-19 pandemic, it’s the
indigenous population, which will be the most vulnerable [because] we don’t
have a comprehensive health system,” Abel Bruno Arriaga, mayor of Malinaltepec
in the rugged La Montaña region of Guerrero, told El Universal.




