The Philippines will lift most COVID-19 restrictions in the capital Manila in March, President Rodrigo Duterte’s spokesman said Sunday, after a sharp drop in infections and a rising number of people vaccinated.
It comes weeks after the country reopened its borders to foreign tourists for the first time in two years and as campaigning for the May 9 national elections cranks up.
Businesses, government agencies and public transport will be allowed to operate at full capacity when the metropolis of 13 million people is placed on the lowest alert level on Tuesday, said Duterte spokesman Karlo Nograles, which he previously described as the “new normal.”
Masks will still have to be worn in public, but will no longer be required during sport or exercise under the new rules, which also apply to another 38 areas of the country.
Temperature checks for entering establishments will not be necessary and contact tracing efforts all but scrapped.
Cases have averaged 1,421 in the past week, compared with a peak of 39,004 on January 15 when the highly contagious Omicron strain ripped through the country. After lengthy lockdowns which devastated the economy and threw millions out of work, the relaxation will help ease the financial misery for many Filipinos.
A conductor (right) calls on passengers beside a passenger bus with signage that reads “No Vaccine No Ride” in Quezon City, suburban Manila in the Philippines on January 17, 2022. The Philippine government banned unvaccinated people from using public transport amid a record surge in coronavirus cases. Photo: AFP