Ireland to remove mask-wearing rules among other COVID-19 restrictions

Xinhua News Agency

DUBLIN – Ireland will remove the rules of mandatory mask-wearing in indoor public facilities and on public transport starting from Feb. 28, said the Irish government on Tuesday, Feb. 22.

Meanwhile, the specific protective measures currently in place in primary and secondary schools as well as in early learning and school-aged childcare facilities will also be removed, said the government in a statement.

The specific measures aimed at protecting local primary, secondary and pre-school children include pods, social distancing, and staggering breaks, it added.

Pods refer to the practice that students must be grouped in a limited number while participating in an activity.

The statement also said that from the end of this month on, people who show symptoms of COVID-19 will no longer need to take a test except pregnant women, elders, and people who have a high-risk medical condition or are immunocompromised.

But they must self-isolate themselves until 48 hours after the symptoms resolve, it said, adding that people who are close contacts of a confirmed COVID-19 case will also no longer need to have a test except healthcare workers who are identified as a household close contact.

Following the implementation of these newly announced rules, nearly all the COVID-19 restrictions in Ireland will be removed.

The Irish Department of Health said on Tuesday that an additional 3,294 confirmed cases of COVID-19 were reported in the day, a figure not low at all for a country with a mere population of five million despite the fact the figure is only half of the level compared with a month ago.

The Irish government in the statement advised the public to continue to wear masks on public transport and in healthcare settings apparently in fear of a possible rebound of the cases following the scrapping of the rules.

But these are just advices and have no legal binding.

Irish health minister Stephen Donnelly told local media on Tuesday that he believed it is “appropriate” for the government to lift most of the remaining restrictions based on the current trajectory of the pandemic in Ireland as well as the progress of the vaccination program in the country.

Following a drastic removal of the COVID-19 restrictions by the Irish government on Jan. 22, the daily numbers of COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and patients in intensive care units in the country have remained at a much lower level for most of the time since that date, showed the data.

As of Monday (Feb. 21), more than 3.95 million people in Ireland have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and over 2.79 million out of these people have received the booster vaccines, according to the latest official statistics. (Xinhua) – bny

 

Popular

Senate probe on flood control bares ‘ghost projects’, favoritism

By Wilnard Bacelonia | Philippine News Agency The Senate Blue Ribbon Committee on Tuesday opened its inquiry into alleged anomalies in multibillion-peso flood control projects,...

House begins deliberations on proposed P6.793-T nat’l budget for 2026

By Brian Campued “Bawat piso ay may pinaglalaanan, at bawat gastusin ay dapat may pakinabang sa tao.” The House of Representatives would ensure that every peso...

PBBM to Herbosa: Ensure implementation of ‘zero balance billing’ in all DOH hospitals

By Brian Campued President Ferdinand R. Marcos instructed Department of Health (DOH) Sec. Teodoro Herbosa to ensure that all DOH hospitals are well-versed in implementing...

PBBM lauds solar pump irrigation project in Eastern Visayas

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet Consistent with his mandate of incorporating renewable energy with the government’s resolve to modernize agriculture infrastructure, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr....