https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/09/03/grim-picture-as-indonesia-enters-sixth-month-of-covid-19-outbreak.html



Grim picture as Indonesia enters sixth month of COVID-19 outbreak

Gemma Holliani Cahya and Marchio Irfan Gorbiano The Jakarta Post Jakarta
/   Thu, September 3, 2020   /   09:35 am



President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo greets street vendors during a visit to East
Java recently. (Presidential Press Bureau/Muchlis Jr)

As Indonesia enters its sixth month since COVID-19 first reached it shores,
the administration of President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo continues to struggle
to get on top of the public health crisis, as indicated by the resurgence
of spikes in new cases, while other countries in the region, like Thailand
and the Philippines, have been able to claim success in their handling of
the pandemic. Indonesia reported 3,075 new cases on Wednesday, bringing the
country's overall tally to 180,646, data from the Health Ministry’s website
show. The country witnessed 111 more deaths on Wednesday, taking the total
number of fatalities to 7,616, the highest death toll in Southeast Asia.

Read also:* Indonesia's latest official COVID-19 figures *


Thailand, on the other hand, has reported zero cases of local transmission
for 100 days in a row, joining a small group of places like Taiwan where
the pathogen has been virtually eliminated. Thailand has not recorded a
single case of community transmission since May 26, Bloomberg reported on
Wednesday, based on data from the country’s health ministry. The
Philippines’ health ministry, meanwhile, recorded 2,218 new coronavirus
infections on Wednesday, the country's lowest daily increase in cases in
five weeks, and 27 additional deaths. Public health experts and
epidemiologists have blamed the worsening situation in Indonesia on what
they call a "business-as-usual” approach taken by the central government
and regional administrations, some of which have decided to relax social
restrictions while case numbers have been continuing to rise.

Yudi Fajar, a senior researcher at the SMERU Research Institute, said that
despite the severity of the public health crisis, coordination and policy
implementation were mostly relegated to ministries and other government
institutions, much like how the bureaucracy worked prior to the pandemic.

A jumble of policies and actions has been the result, creating confusion
among the public, Yudi said.

“Such indecisiveness has been one of the main reasons there is a heightened
sense of false security among the public, which has in turn worsened the
situation. This is a vicious cycle,” he told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.
To effectively handle the crisis, Yudi said the government needed to
strengthen its institutions and improve its workflow and coordination. In
recent weeks, more and more municipalities and regencies have been
classified as high-risk “red zones”, where new infection clusters have been
detected, while the country as a whole has seen consecutive record daily
highs in new confirmed cases. Data from the nation’s COVID-19 task force
show that on Aug. 16 only slightly above 5 percent of the archipelago was
classified as red zones. By Aug. 30, that percentage had nearly tripled.
Epidemiologists have also raised concerns the rate of infection could
overwhelm the country’s health facilities, putting health care workers at
greater risk. As of Wednesday, at least 102 doctors had died from COVID-19.
The deaths of many more nurses, midwives and other health workers are not
fully accounted for. Despite the grim picture, many people are continuing
to live their lives like normal, ignoring basic safety measures, like
wearing a mask in public. The central and local governments have also yet
to impose strict measures to ban large gatherings and restrict mobility to
curb the virus. Read also: Patients crowd hospitals as Indonesia loses 183
'priceless' medical workers Indonesian Epidemiologists Association (PAEI)
chairman Hariadi Wibisono said the government’s promotion of the idea of a
"new normal" was to blame for the rising infections, a concept popularized
as authorities sought to jumpstart the flagging economy. “The government’s
policies have been ambivalent, as they permit the reopening of public
places, allowing people to gather. So, people have the perception that they
can adapt to a new life now that the war on COVID-19 is over. But the virus
is still here with us,” Hariadi said. President Jokowi’s administration has
faced criticism since the early days of the pandemic for its lackluster
efforts to contain the transmission of the virus. The President insisted
that a complete lockdown was not the right approach for the country, and
chose instead to implement a partial lockdown through so-called
“large-scale social restrictions” (PSBB) on March 31, almost a month after
Indonesia confirmed its first cases on March 2. The President also
attracted public criticism following his call to “peacefully coexist” with
COVID-19 on May 7, as the country stepped up preparations for the
introduction of “new normal” protocols as a prerequisite for the easing of
PSBB measures. “Until an effective vaccine is discovered, we have to
peacefully coexist with COVID-19 for a certain period going forward. And we
are lucky, as at the beginning we chose to implement PSBB measures, not a
lockdown. The PSBB measures involved restrictions on activities in public
spaces,” Jokowi said in June. Jokowi also previously told his ministers
that Indonesia needed to flatten the curve “at all costs”, setting a goal
to bring transmission under control by July. On Monday, Jokowi was quoted
by Reuters as saying that the pandemic would reach its peak in Indonesia in
September and that it would begin to taper off soon after. In its most
recent “new-normal” policy, the government has allowed more schools to
open, both in moderate-risk yellow zones and in low-risk green zones. Read
also: Curfews will do little to stop COVID-19 surge in Greater Jakarta, say
experts In Jakarta, Governor Anies Baswedan recently decided that cinemas
would soon be allowed to reopen, despite the fact the capital recently
recorded its highest daily increase in infections. “We will prepare the
complete regulation soon, which will cover all aspects pertaining to the
implementation of health protocols, following the [COVID-19] task force’s
recommendations,” Anies said On Sunday, four days after Anies made the
announcement, Jakarta recorded 1,114 new cases, the highest daily spike so
far, as the capital city returned to being the country’s epicenter of the
outbreak, surpassing East Java. Laura Navika Yamani, an epidemiologist from
the Surabaya-based Airlangga University, said the fact Indonesia had not
reached its peak of the outbreak even after six months was a clear
indication that measures to control the spread of the virus had failed.
Laura said the government could rectify the situation by putting the
economy on the backburner and beginning to follow the guidelines made by
epidemiologists. “There is no other way other than implementing health
protocols in these circumstances," Laura said.

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