In July, the Namibia government removed all restrictions imposed on account of Covid-19 but requested citizens to voluntarily comply with public health and social measures as well as ensure that good hand hygiene becomes part of the new normal.
Health minister Dr Kalumbi Shangula said Namibia’s approach to combating Covid-19 has been and continues to be focused on saving lives, restoring livelihoods and contributing to the recovery of the economy.
“Sadly, the total number of deaths is 4 060 since the beginning of the pandemic,” he said.
President Hage Geingob announced this at the 45th, and for now, the last monthly Covid-19 public briefing until further notice.
The Covid-19 public updates were withdrawn, and the health ministry now briefs the public on pandemic-related issues on Thursdays through the government information centre.
Geingob added there is no doubt the physical and emotional toll of what the nation went through will remain a scar that will be felt for many years to come.
“We are now at a stage where we can significantly lower the scale of our investment in the fight against Covid-19,” he said, adding the control of the pandemic will be carried out in the same way as was for Hepatitis E.
On 2 March 2022, the health ministry announced the end of the Hepatitis E outbreak in Namibia after it was declared a plague in 2017.
The liver disease cost 66 lives in the country, leading up to September 2020, hence the need to replicate measures under Hepatitis E when handling Covid-19.
With no regulations in place, the ministry will continue doing more awareness-raising, promoting hygiene and all other measures until the pandemic is eradicated.
“The government will intensify the vaccination campaign. We believe that vaccination is necessary to protect the nation against any outbreak of new variants of Covid-19. Foreign travellers must present vaccination certificates at points of entry,” extended Geingob.
“Companies closed down, supply-chain disruptions affected business operations and many jobs were lost as a result. As a government, through various relief measures, including a grant to more than 500 000 citizens, we endeavoured to limit the economic scarring from Covid-19,” recalled Geingob.
Shangula stated the decision to remove the Covid-19 restrictions gazetted does not mean the pandemic is over.
“Our data continues to illustrate consistently that the overwhelming majority of Covid-19 cases being hospitalised, those in high care and ICU, and those succumbing to Covid-19 are invariably unvaccinated persons. So, please, fellow Namibians, I implore you to get vaccinated; protect yourselves and those around you,” he pleaded.
Caption (Covid):
Get vaccinated… President Hage Geingob has called on Namibians to take personal responsibility against Covid-19.
Photo: Contributed
Health minister Dr Kalumbi Shangula said Namibia’s approach to combating Covid-19 has been and continues to be focused on saving lives, restoring livelihoods and contributing to the recovery of the economy.
“Sadly, the total number of deaths is 4 060 since the beginning of the pandemic,” he said.
President Hage Geingob announced this at the 45th, and for now, the last monthly Covid-19 public briefing until further notice.
The Covid-19 public updates were withdrawn, and the health ministry now briefs the public on pandemic-related issues on Thursdays through the government information centre.
Geingob added there is no doubt the physical and emotional toll of what the nation went through will remain a scar that will be felt for many years to come.
“We are now at a stage where we can significantly lower the scale of our investment in the fight against Covid-19,” he said, adding the control of the pandemic will be carried out in the same way as was for Hepatitis E.
On 2 March 2022, the health ministry announced the end of the Hepatitis E outbreak in Namibia after it was declared a plague in 2017.
The liver disease cost 66 lives in the country, leading up to September 2020, hence the need to replicate measures under Hepatitis E when handling Covid-19.
With no regulations in place, the ministry will continue doing more awareness-raising, promoting hygiene and all other measures until the pandemic is eradicated.
“The government will intensify the vaccination campaign. We believe that vaccination is necessary to protect the nation against any outbreak of new variants of Covid-19. Foreign travellers must present vaccination certificates at points of entry,” extended Geingob.
“Companies closed down, supply-chain disruptions affected business operations and many jobs were lost as a result. As a government, through various relief measures, including a grant to more than 500 000 citizens, we endeavoured to limit the economic scarring from Covid-19,” recalled Geingob.
Shangula stated the decision to remove the Covid-19 restrictions gazetted does not mean the pandemic is over.
“Our data continues to illustrate consistently that the overwhelming majority of Covid-19 cases being hospitalised, those in high care and ICU, and those succumbing to Covid-19 are invariably unvaccinated persons. So, please, fellow Namibians, I implore you to get vaccinated; protect yourselves and those around you,” he pleaded.
Photo: Contributed