Mexico City to start exiting coronavirus lockdown on June 1 - Los Angeles Times
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Mexico City will begin gradually reopening June 1, mayor says

Police officers outside City Hall in Mexico City.
Police officers stand guard in March outside City Hall in Mexico City.
(Manuel Velasquez / Getty Images)
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Even as Mexico recorded its largest one-day coronavirus-related death toll, Mexico City announced Wednesday that it would begin a gradual reopening June 1.

With about 9 million residents, the Mexican capital is one of the world’s largest cities. Authorities predicted that the pandemic is nearing its peak in Mexico City, but hospitals in the capital are already about three-quarters full. As of Tuesday night, Mexico City reported more than 15,000 confirmed coronavirus infections and nearly 1,500 deaths.

The nationwide death toll rose by 424 on Wednesday to 6,090, well above last week’s record of 353 deaths reported in one day. Total confirmed infections nationwide grew to 56,594, though the real number is probably several times higher because Mexico performs so little testing.

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Despite the numbers, Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said Mexico City would begin a gradual reopening June 1, when some sectors of the economy would be allowed to resume operations.

While Sheinbaum called on residents to continue taking social distancing measures through June 15, impatience with being shut up at home, household financial demands and a lack of any enforcement have already drawn more and more people back into the streets in recent weeks. More customers are clustering at the city’s famous street food stands and traffic has picked up. The city never shut down its subway system, which millions depend on for transportation.

Sheinbaum’s reopening plan included some of the industries that the federal government already approved to return to work, such as construction, but also adds bicycle sales and beer production.

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Perhaps one of the most heated debates in Mexico during the coronavirus pandemic is whether beer should be considered ‘essential’ during the lockdown.

The mayor said bike shops are being exempted because she wants to promote bicycle use as a way to help improve the health of city residents. As elsewhere around the world, Mexico’s COVID-19 dead have included a high percentage of people suffering from ailments such as diabetes and obesity.

Some businesses never shut down in the city, but did implement social distancing measures. At an office goods store in a central neighborhood Wednesday, a dozen people lined up in the parking lot outside. A security guard with a mask and bottle of hand sanitizer let customers enter one at a time only when an employee was available to escort them and after a squirt of gel on their hands.

Sheinbaum has acknowledged that the real number of deaths in Mexico City is surely higher, but says an independent panel will have to review suspected cases and make a determination.

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The city’s graduated reopening will be based on its hospital occupancy, which currently stands at 76%.

For decades, Jaime Montejo fought to bring dignity to sex workers in Mexico City, protecting them from police, pimps and eventually the coronavirus. Then he got sick.

“The trend continues increasing, but we hope this trend will decrease in the coming weeks,†Sheinbaum said.

The rest of the city’s economic activity won’t be allowed to resume until hospital occupancy drops below 59%. Even then, restaurants, hotels and churches will be limited to 30% of their capacity.

Sports are to resume without fans. But in professional soccer, Mexico’s most popular sport, which has been shut down since March 15, club owners are still debating whether to restart their season or just call it off.

Fanny Alejandra Manriquez Ezquivel, a city employee who has continued working and is not quarantined at home, said Wednesday that she thinks it is time for the city to return to some semblance of normality.

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“Sooner or later we’re all going to get infected and you’ve got to return to normalcy,†Manriquez said. “They’re the ones who know and have the certainty of how to manage the city.â€

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