A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, May 8, 2020
How They Are Doing It In The UK
Colombo
Telegraph has a readership of Sri Lankans living in the country, a
worldwide Lankan readership, and also non-Lankan well-wishers.
Columnists should make their communications of interest to a broad
spectrum, but this time I am going to renege with a column that may be
informative for those of us in Lanka but stale news for people living in
the UK. It’s a note from a good old Lankan friend in London about how
corona-things are being done there – I quote without comment. Since our
media starves us of news or regurgitates government views only, people
need to see how it’s done elsewhere. Which is not to say they are always
better. (Some that do not have curfew or stringent lockdown are in bad
shape, USA and UK among them, others with no curfew or lockdown are
progressing well, Hong Kong, Taiwan, New Zealand and Vietnam among
them).
QUOTE
“When it hit Wuhan, people and government here ignored it; spectators
watching troubles in Wuhan! They felt that like MERS and SARS it would
not reach Europe. When it spread to the Far East, they still ignored it.
South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore tackled it using experience with
SARS, implemented a regime of test and trace, isolated infected people,
controlled spread and suppressed it. In Europe it started with the
skiing population in the Alps, but Germany successfully implemented a
test and trace regime. When it reached UK, through a skiing family, the
authorities were caught unprepared. The initial government response was
based on the following: a) There is no treatment, b) there is no
vaccine. It concluded that people have to live with it and the strategy
chosen was what is described as Herd Immunity. That failed, the numbers
started to rise!
In March Imperial College scientists dropped a bombshell and predicted
up to 500,000 deaths and said National Health Service (NHS) was not
equipped to cope with these numbers. Government panicked, accepted
scientific advice and changed strategy to flatten the peak, enable NHS
to cope and dampen the so-called vector “r”. First it encouraged people
to work from home and adopt improved hygiene; some companies followed,
but it did not stop the spread. Transport and schools were the conduit
for spread. People withdrew children from schools, parents stopped going
to work to look after children. The government was in a soup and around
March 15:
1. Closed schools, restaurants, pubs, gyms and sports and advised against any public gatherings.
2. Advised people to stay at home to relieve the NHS and save lives
3. Keep 2 metre distance between individuals not of the same household
4. Practice improved hygiene
5. No unnecessary travel
6. No social gatherings of over 10 (funerals, weddings etc.)
Now, supermarkets and shops are open during usual hours. They implement
the advisory 2 metre distance within their precincts by controlling
numbers entering and employing one-way rules. Corner shops and banks are
open normal hours but allow only one person to enter at a time. Both
government and opposition are against reduction in personal liberties
and rely on citizen’s self-discipline and a benevolent policing regime.
Both Prime Minister and Health Minister were infected, so they are
sympathetic to victims. The Chancellor Rishi Sunak has thrown in
Treasury money to the delight of Labour. The Conservatives who vilified
Corbyn have become generous in providing a cushion to the affected.
CONTINUE QUOTE
Coming to your specific questions
1. ‘I suppose you are all encouraged to stay home?’ Most are indoors
except essential workers such as NHS staff, shops, police. Employers who
can keep 2 m between workers can keep business going. The construction
industry is exempted. Self-employed in the building industry who do not
qualify for relief continue to work.
2. ‘I suppose you are requested to work from home?’ Yes, encouraged as
it stops workers coming into contact at work and in public transport.
Several bus drivers have died.


