Responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in May 2021

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This article documents the chronology of the response to the COVID-19 pandemic in May 2021, which originated in Wuhan, China in December 2019. Some developments may become known or fully understood only in retrospect. Reporting on this pandemic began in December 2019.

7 May

Reactions and measures in Africa

Reactions and measures in the Americas

14 May

  • The City of Toronto has cancelled all event permits until 6 September 2021 in order to slow the spread of COVID-19.[3]

17 May

  • Panama mandates the use of face shields in addition to face masks in public transportation.[4]

29 May

Reactions and measures in the Eastern Mediterranean

Reactions and measures in Europe

8 May

  • The British Secretary of State for Transport Grant Shapps announced that several countries would be upgraded to England's new "green list" in mid-May; which allows quarantine-free travel with testing at the border and two days after returning. From 12 May, travellers from Nepal and the Maldives will be allowed to travel to England without undergoing quarantine. From 17 May, travellers from Australia, Brunei, the Falkland Islands, the Faroe Islands, Gibraltar, Iceland, Israel (including Jerusalem), New Zealand, Portugal (including the Azores and Madeira) and Singapore will be allowed to enter England without undergoing quarantine.[6]

Reactions and measures in South, East and Southeast Asia

3 May

  • The Malaysian Government has re-imposed two-week Movement Control Order restrictions in Selangor, Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Johor and Sarawak in response to a nationwide spike in COVID-19 cases. Schools will be closed and social and religious gatherings will be banned. While some economic activities will be allowed, eateries can only provide takeaway services.[7]

4 May

5 May

8 May

  • Malaysian Senior Minister (Security) Ismail Sabri Yaakob confirmed that the Malaysian Government would not implement a nationwide movement control order but will instead impose targeted movement restrictions in response to local outbreaks.[11]
  • The Malaysian Government has banned all interstate and inter-district travel without police approval between 10 May and 6 June 2021.[12]

10 May

  • Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin announced that a nationwide Movement Control Order lockdown would be reinstated from 12 May to 7 June. Dining in, social activities and shopping areas will be suspended although workers are allowed to commute between work and home. Inter-district and inter-state travel are also banned.[13]

17 May

26 May

On 26 May, Asahi Shimbun, which is one of the Japanese mainstream media outlets and listed as Tokyo 2020 official sponsors, urged Japan's prime minister Yoshihide Suga to cancel the Tokyo Olympics. The newspaper pointed to widespread public opposition to the Olympics and criticised the International Olympic Committee for its heavy-handed insistence that the Games would go ahead this summer regardless of the coronavirus situation in Japan.[15]

28 May

  • Malaysian Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin has announced that a nationwide "total lockdown" will be imposed on all social and economic sectors in Malaysia from 1 June to 14 June 2021. Under this lockdown, only essential economic and social services will be allowed to operate.[16][17]

Reactions and measures in the Western Pacific

See also

References

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