omply with containment measures — and for what? It didn’t stop his city from suffering a devastating outbreak. The hospitals still became overwhelmed. People are still dying. So much sacrifice, and so little to show for it.
His frustration has given way to distrust. He believes officials are using the pandemic to bilk the system. Leaders are being accused of fraud and corruption from Panama to Rio de Janeiro, where the state governor is now embroiled in scandal. The people, Montelo said, are being played for fools. So he now leaves the house whenever he can — to protest the quarantines and show support for President Jair Bolsonaro, who has repeatedly played down the disease and called on the country to reopen immediately.
Leaders are being accused of fraud and corruption from Panama to Rio de Janeiro, where the state governor is now embroiled in scandal. The people, Montelo said, are being played for fools. So he now leaves the house whenever he can — to protest the quarantines and show support for President Jair Bolsonaro, who has repeatedly played down the disease and called on the country to reopen immediately.
“I never believed the stories,” Montelo said. “I’m not someone who blindly follows the media.”
As cases in Brazil surge and the hospital system buckles, the country is losing the political will for more quarantines. The streets are filling once more. Officials in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo barely even talk anymore about harsher containment measures.
“I know my country,” said Margareth Dalcolmo, a researcher at the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation. “There are 2 million people who live in the favelas in Rio, and to talk about social distancing is ridiculous. It’s pathetic. It’s empty rhetoric. It doesn’t mean anything.”
The Pan American Health Organization last week urged a recommitment to social distancing in Brazil to avert a calamity. Its projections showed that 88,000 people could die by August. Researchers at the University of Washington put their death toll still higher — around 125,000 by August.
“It is still not the time to relax restrictions or to reduce preventive strategies,” said Carissa Etienne, the organization’s director. “It’s necessary to remain strong and vigilant, and implement aggressive and proven measures of public health.”
But the following day, João Doria, the governor of São Paulo, the heart of the outbreak in Brazil, announced what he described as a “conscious reopening.” Cases continued to climb, and there’s no vaccine, but the country is trying to force its way back to normal.
“All of the government decisions in relationship to covid-19 have been based on science and medicine,” he said. “There is no guessing here.”
Heloísa Traiano contributed to this report.
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