EDITOR, The Tribune
Yes, we have brought our community spread under control, thanks to the herculean efforts of this government. However, we also opened our borders last week to the United States, where the virus continues to rage and is only in its first stages according to experts. Even more to the point, the vast majority of our tourists come from the frenzied COVID hotspots of New York and South Florida, where thousands upon thousands of new cases continue to be recorded each day.
We know that some time ago, Jamaica also brought their community spread under control. Then, they opened up to flights from the United States and recorded 14 new cases within a 24-hour period. It is silly to just assume the same won’t happen here, regardless of our safety protocols. Certainly, mandating that Americans test negative within seven days of coming to the Bahamas and taking their temperature upon arrival are good ideas. But it is not a fool-proof system. Such a system does not exist.
With symptoms taking up to 14 says to manifest, a traveller from Miami could test negative seven days before travelling to the Bahamas, and then have plenty of time to go out and contract COVID 19 on the streets of their city before landing in Nassau with no symptoms whatsoever. This will undoubtedly happen in multiple cases. We should not fool ourselves into complacency.
And if even just one of those asymptomatic travellers, or an unsuspecting Bahamian they may have infected in the meantime, sets foot on the terminally crowded beaches of a holiday weekend, we are back to square 1, or even worse, as thousands of people could be infected and our healthcare system overwhelmed.
Near the beginning of the outbreak of COVID 19, South Korea stabilized its case number at 30. They thought everything was under control. But a single patient, known as “Patient 31” attended several crowded events and became a “super-spreader”. Almost overnight, South Korea was dealing with thousands upon thousands of cases - most of them traced back to that single patient. It goes to show that under certain conditions, it only takes one infected person to start a huge outbreak. Crowded beaches, combined with travellers from COVID spike areas in the United States are exactly the right combination to spell disaster for the Bahamas.
I find the Tribune’s editorial to be shortsighted, irresponsible and uninformed. It is exactly the kind of attitude that got the United States into the mess they are in now. The Tribune editor thinks that the Prime Minister is setting us up for a miserable Independence celebration? Imagine the misery 14 says later if the beaches had been open. We would reap the bitter harvest of unthinking impatience and myopia.
The govenment has done an excellent job in shepherding us through this unpresidented danger so far, we should continue to have patience and trust that they are working on our behalf. They have earned the benefit of the doubt.
RICARDO JOHNSON
Nassau,
July 7, 2020.
Comments
joeblow 4 years, 4 months ago
I want to see this guy some cheap, real cheap beachfront property!
Dawes 4 years, 4 months ago
Surprised the letter writer did not also advocate us closing down all bars and restaurants. In fact close everything except food stores and pharmacy which we can go on certain days (say using our last name). Closing the beach to protect us is a stick man argument, as there is plenty other places that should be closed too.
themessenger 4 years, 4 months ago
Yes, lets have a little exercise in population control sans condoms and birth control pills. My Everybody go get all crease up on the beach, drink, party and carry on bad as usual. After hundreds of them get sick and the health system, what little we have, is overwhelmed the rest could go back on the beach to lay down and die. Cheap, easy and efficient population control and we don't even have to have a war.
birdiestrachan 4 years, 4 months ago
The ramblings of a Mad Man.
He sounds very much like roc wit doc.
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