Ø Live Update - New Zealand`s locks down on Covid-19
Ø Health – cases of Covid-19 Has increase
with 45 New Cases
Ø Lura - I’ve personally received
lots of private messages regarding information that people think is useful but
is purely disinformation
New
Zealand’s health minister has pleaded with people to stop spreading
misinformation about the coronavirus, as the government struggles to contain a
mini-cluster centred on an evangelical church in Auckland.
The mini-cluster
started with four cases in the suburb of Mt Roskill last month, and has now
grown to 45 cases.
Health authorities
say they have struggled to isolate and lock down the cluster as some people
have refused to co-operate, saying they do not believe in the virus, and will
not share their close contacts
“Repeated,
deliberate and malicious spread of misinformation” is also proliferating
online, health minister Chris Hipkins said, prompting him to issue a stark
warning that lives are at stake.
We
do have to accept the science,” the minister said.
“We just have to
look at what is happening internationally where it has gotten out of control
and deaths are a daily occurrence. We are very fortunate in New Zealand that because of efforts we’ve
taken we’re not seeing that. What that means though is that some people are
becoming more sceptical as time goes on.”
“The virus is very
deadly and there is no vaccine for it.”
Pakilau Manase Lua
is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist church and told RNZ he regularly receives private
messages from fellow church-goers casting doubt on on the seriousness of
Covid-19.
“I’ve personally
received lots of private messages regarding information that people think is
useful but is purely disinformation, either about the virus itself or fear
around the vaccine,”, Lura, who is also part of the Pacific response team in
Auckland, said.
“It’s been
spreading like wildfire through social media.”
The ministry of
health has asked all 332 members of the Mt Roskill Evangelical Fellowship to be
retested for Covid-19, and so far 64% of members have complied, with the
church’s minister urging co-operation.
Fines
or punishment for failing to co-operate with authorities were not yet being
considered, Hipkins said, because it could cause people to hide their symptoms
or go underground.
However, if repeat
offenders continued to spread misinformation in the community, punitive action
may be an option.
Students
at St Dominic’s Catholic College have had to be sent home and tested this week,
after a member of the Mt Roskill church failed to disclose all their close
contacts, and one, who tested positive, continued going to school.
Health authorities are investigating whether the non-disclosure was deliberate on this matter against it say.
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