Bogota Mayor Claudia Lopez on Monday insisted on a second lockdown in Colombia’s capital, effectively ending the economic reactivation promoted by President Ivan Duque.
The city’s health authorities will raise its alert level to red once Bogota’s intensive care unit (ICU) occupancy rate has reached 75% as a consequence of the coronavirus pandemic.
At that point Lopez wants to impose a second lockdown to prevent the collapse of the healthcare system, the mayor has said on several occasions.
On Tuesday morning, hours before the mayor was set to meet with national government officials, the ICU occupancy rate had risen to 73.4% from 71.4% the night before.
Bogota Mayor Claudia Lopez
Lopez has been a fierce critic of Duque, and specifically his plan to gradually reactivate economic activity before providing hospitals with the necessary equipment or controlling the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.
Health Minister Fernando Ruiz blamed citizens’ “lack of discipline” to curb the contagion, much to the annoyance of Bogota’s mayor, who claimed the government has been irresponsible by, for example, decreeing a tax-free shopping day.
Bogota Mayor Claudia Lopez
Whether Lopez will be able to declare a second lockdown is uncertain. The government issued a decree earlier this month that revoked the powers of mayors and governors to implement any measures without the authorization of the health ministry.
The Bogota mayor is Colombia’s second most powerful public official after the president. She can always choose to implement measures that would effectively shut down the city.