Thailand will extend a nationwide state of emergency to tackle the coronavirus pandemic for another two months as the deadliest phase of the outbreak to hit the nation so far shows no signs of easing.
The Center for Covid-19 Situation Administration, headed by Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha, on Friday approved the extension of the emergency through the end of July, according to spokesman Taweesilp Visanuyothin. The decree, which allows the government to streamline disease-control plans without multiple approvals from various agencies, has been in place since March last year.
Thailand is battling the third wave of outbreak that has quadrupled the nation’s case count in just seven weeks, with deaths jumping sevenfold. The wave of infections, which started in Bangkok’s night entertainment venues in early April, has now spread to crowded communities, construction camps and prisons, with dozens of clusters in the capital.
Thailand has administered 2.5 million shots and its pace of vaccinations has been slow due to limited supply of jabs. The nation of almost 70 million people has so far focused on health care and frontline workers, and residents in regions that have an ongoing outbreak, or are preparing to reopen for vaccinated tourists this year. But the government has added workers to a priority list to restart the economy.
Thailand has slashed its growth outlook for this year, citing the delay in reopening borders to foreign tourists and slow pace of vaccination. The National Economic and Social Development Council said this week that the economy may expand between 1.5 percent and 2.5 percent this year, less than the 2.5 percent-3.5 percent forecast in February.