The Chief Minister has hit out at comparisons between Jersey and Guernsey’s diverging pandemic strategies, arguing that it’s not a competition.
Senator John Le Fondré said it won’t be possible to tell which island has done better or worse until five to 10 years.
His comments came in a press conference during which he discussed a new set of restrictions – including the closure of non-essential shops and a limit on all gatherings indoors and outdoors – aiming to flatten the curve of infection.
Video: The States of Guernsey released a video counting their blessings for Christmas.
Beyond the quarantine requirements for all arrivals, there are currently no restrictions in Guernsey, and none have been issued for Christmas, a fact the States of Guernsey celebrated in a video noting "we are able to enjoy the festivities in a way that almost no one else in the World can".
At the time of the conference, there were four active cases in Guernsey – a number which has since risen to eight following contact tracing. In Jersey, the latest figures show a total number of cases of 988, with 77 new cases identified over the last 24 hours and 77 having recovered.
While Guernsey adopted an elimination strategy - which Deputy Jess Perchard pledged for to achieve zero cases of the virus locally - Jersey decided to 'delay, contain, shield’.
The number of active cases in the Island is 988.
— Government of Jersey (@GovJersey) December 23, 2020
600 cases are symptomatic and 388 cases are asymptomatic. 28 are in hospital (-3).
Total Tests
221,594 negative tests (+1,850)
2,560 confirmed positive (+77)
1,541 confirmed recovered (+77)
159 pending
When asked by Express how Jersey’s strategy compared to that of its sister island, the Chief Minister refused to make any comparison.
“We don’t comment on other jurisdictions, because it’s only going to be in 5 or 10 years’ time that we will know who did better or who did worse I’d suggest,” he said.
“It’s not a competition, it’s about following the profile that’s appropriate for our island.”
He then went on to defend the local strategy, saying it had been focused on doing the best for the island.
“We’ve invested a lot in putting all the measures in place about testing, about the border controls, about allowing, therefore, people to have a fairly free summer for example. That has been part of the strategy,” Senator Le Fondré said.
“We’ve been investing all the way through for months and months and months to then actually bring us to this place, which is we’re getting a lot more intelligence at how that virus is spreading in our community and then how we address it.”
Pictured: The Chief Minister maintains the number of cases is high because a lot of people are being tested.
Despite the worrying rising trend of active cases, the Chief Minister then tried to paint a better picture of the current situation, assuring the Government is still in control of it.
“I think we’ve got to stand back and say - 'look, our positivity rate still remains relatively low’,” he said.
“We’ve said that our numbers only look high because of the significant amount of testing we’re doing.
“We are being proactive because we’re watching that increase and saying we think there’s further measures we need to do to keep the suppression of things in place. From that point of view, we’re all doing the very best for the island and we will continue to do so.”
The Health Minister, Deputy Richard Renouf, also intervened, explaining that Jersey’s strategy was about “balancing harms”.
“Thus far we’ve been fortunate in that the number of people needing treatment in the hospital has been low, so in that respect we’ve kept a good control on this and successfully balanced those harms.”
There are currently 28 islanders with covid-19 in hospital, with one islander who was receiving treatment for covid-19 having died yesterday.
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Just accept responsibility for the poorly managed situation that is going on and you might get a bit more respect.
Currently you are appearing to be highly incompetent and don’t appear to care about people’s lives or livelihoods!
But it really doesn't matter as John Le Fondre will never admit that his ministers have done anything but comply with the medical evidence. There really is no answer to that.
Thank goodness we can all look forward to a good political clear out at the next elections.
Just accept responsibility for the poorly managed situation that is going on and you might get a bit more respect.
Currently you are appearing to be highly incompetent and don’t appear to care about people’s lives or livelihoods!
Jersey's initiative was a requested quarantine (if it's not too much trouble - it's only voluntary) and handing out information leaflets to point out that a virulent and deadly virus was prevalent.
Then Lockdown - after C19 had arrived (forever BTW + endless variants). Then testing regimes and FINALLY - compulsory quarantine.
Cost so far: 40 deaths, thousands of people confined at home for months, an invoice already billed at £208Million - with a further £100Million budgeted for 2021.
I understand that life in Guernsey continues pretty much as normal (face masks are optional apparently) and their C19 website notes that the "Bailiwick Bubble" - is enjoying freedoms that other countries can only dream of.
I have been trying to find out who decided to place cash ahead of public health - Council of Ministers, Emergencies Council, Ports of Jersey (Board or Executive Officers), but - unsurprisiingly - nobody is prepared to own up to the initial catastrophic decision. Worryingly, whoever did, is still making decisions at the highest level - which should be curtailed as soon as possible.
For instance how many people chose to flout the self isolation rules and got away with it? How many islanders who were advised to wear masks before it became compulsory deliberately refused? How many islanders get together, and still do,in other peoples houses?
It’s all too easy to put all the blame at the feet of government whilst turning a blind eye to those amongst us who have wilfully broken the rules that the rest of us are following.