BFF-18 Colombia calls emergency, South American football off as virus tightens grip

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BFF-18

HEALTH-VIRUS-LATAM

Colombia calls emergency, South American football off as virus tightens
grip

MONTEVIDEO, March 18, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Colombia and Bolivia both declared
states of emergency and Brazil recorded its first coronavirus death as the
global pandemic began to grip South America as tightly as other devastated
regions.

Although COVID-19 was initially slower to take hold in Latin America than
other parts of the world, Brazil, Chile and Peru are now reporting hundreds
of cases as daily life in towns and cities halts.

“With these exceptional conditions that are facing the country… we have
made this decision to declare the state of emergency,” Colombian President
Ivan Duque said, asking citizens older than 70 to remain indoors.

Bolivia’s presidential office announced a “state of health emergency”
Tuesday, imposing a 12-hour overnight curfew until March 31 — and adding
borders would be closed to foreigners within two days and all international
flights grounded in 72 hours.

Similarly, Dominican Republic President Danilo Medina said the country
would close its borders and suspend international air travel for 15 days from
Thursday.

– Football off – The continent’s football governing body CONMEBOL said the
month-long 2020 Copa America would be delayed until 2021, shortly after UEFA
announced the same decision for the European Championships.

“It’s an extraordinary measure due to an unexpected situation, and
therefore responds to the fundamental need to avoid an exponential evolution
of the virus,” the organisation said of the decision to delay the June 12
kick-off.

The tournament — set to be played in Argentina and Colombia — is now
scheduled to run from June 11 – July 11, 2021.

The championships were the latest in a string of major sporting events to
be halted or postponed over the pandemic, which has killed more than 7,800
people and infected almost 200,000 worldwide.

Shortly after the postponement of the Copa America, Argentina’s league
also suspended play, meaning all major football competitions in South America
have been stopped.

Costa Rica also suspended its football championship and announced it would
shut national parks to visitors from March 23 to April 13.

And Mexican football side Atletico San Luis said Tuesday its president,
Alberto Marrero, had been diagnosed with COVID-19 — taking the country’s
toll to 93.

– ‘Hysteria’ –

Away from the sporting arena, Chile was studying the possibility of
pushing back its April 26 referendum on changing the dictatorship-era
constitution, and upcoming elections in Bolivia on May 3 could be called into
question.

Brazil confirmed its first COVID-19 death as Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro
declared a state of emergency.

Yet President Jair Bolsonaro continued to buck the global trend towards
increased vigilance, condemning the “hysteria” over the pandemic.

Brazil — the largest country in Latin America, with 210 million people —
has confirmed more than 300 coronavirus infections concentrated in Sao Paulo
and Rio, including its first fatal case, a 62-year-old man who had underlying
health problems.

Bolsonaro himself tested negative for the virus for the second time
Tuesday, the 64-year-old president announced on Twitter, after attending a
gathering in the US last week that has so far seen 13 positive cases among
its attendees.

Despite Brazil’s health minister recommending the president remain in
isolation until a third test, the far-right leader has continued to meet with
supporters — even as Sao Paulo’s mayor said the nation’s latest death “shows
how severe this pandemic is, despite what some would like to believe.”

Rio closed two of its most popular attractions: the Christ the Redeemer
statue and the Sugarloaf Mountain cable car.

In Argentina, which has registered two COVID-19 deaths, the government has
suspended domestic flights, long-haul bus trips and trains for five days
while neighboring Bolivia shuts its borders to foreigners from Thursday.

– ‘Health comes first’ –

In Chile, different political factions and medical authorities were
studying the possibility of suspending April’s referendum.

The government of right-wing President Sebastian Pinera agreed to hold the
April vote on changing the three-decade-old constitution following months of
street protests against inequality.

Heraldo Munoz, the president of the opposition Party for Democracy, said:
“The people’s health comes first.”

Workers in several Santiago shopping malls held protests demanding they be
closed over fears staff are being exposed to coronavirus by shoppers.

“If it is supposed to be something so extreme, why don’t they close the
mall?” storeworker Ingrid Vargas told AFP.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1340 hrs