Coronavirus: Irish St Patrick's Day parades cancelled

Authored by bbc.co.uk and submitted by cu3ed
image for Coronavirus: Irish St Patrick's Day parades cancelled

Image copyright PA Media Image caption Thousands of people attend the Dublin parade every year

St Patrick's Day parades across the island of Ireland have been affected by coronavirus.

On Monday night, Belfast City Council in Northern Ireland voted to cancel the city's parade.

Earlier, Taoiseach (Irish PM) Leo Varadkar announced all parades and festivals in the Republic of Ireland would not go ahead.

Other parades in Northern Ireland are still scheduled to go ahead but are under review.

Skip Twitter post by @belfastcc Members of Belfast City Council have tonight taken a precautionary decision to postpone this year's St Patrick's Day parade and concert #BelfastStPats — Belfast City Council (@belfastcc) March 9, 2020 Report

Meanwhile Mr Varadkar announced a €430m (£375.7m) package for the Health Service Executive to deal with the impact of Covid-19.

He said the Republic of Ireland would stay in the "containment phase" for as long as possible.

But it would move to the delay and mitigation phase in the coming weeks.

On Monday evening, three new cases of coronavirus were confirmed in the Republic of Ireland bringing the total to 24 cases.

The cases of two women in the south of the country and one woman in the west are associated with close contact with already confirmed cases.

One of the women is a healthcare worker.

The Irish cabinet has agreed a package of reforms for sick pay, illness benefit and supplementary benefit.

They are designed to ensure that employees and the self-employed can abide by medical advice to self-isolate where appropriate, while having their income protected to a greater degree than under the current social welfare system.

Irish Health Minister Simon Harris has said the coronavirus situation is very serious.

He said it was going to require not just a whole of government approach, but a whole of society approach.

Mr Harris told RTÉ's Morning Ireland that there was a moderate-to-high risk that Ireland would follow a pattern seen in other EU countries such as Italy, France and Germany with regard to the Covid-19 outbreak.

Image copyright Pacemaker Press Image caption There is a carnival atmosphere in Belfast for the annual parade

St Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland and is celebrated across the globe every year on his feast day, 17 March.

Dublin hosts the largest parade attracting an estimated 500,000 people last year.

Parades are held both in the Republic of Ireland and in cities and towns across Northern Ireland.

The day is celebrated on the international stage too.

Last year, more than 400 landmarks in more than 50 countries turned green to mark the occasion.

On Monday, two more cases were confirmed in the Republic of Ireland, bringing the total number there to 21. One of the patients has an underlying condition and is seriously ill.

On Sunday, five people were diagnosed with coronavirus in Northern Ireland, bringing the number of cases to 12.

Health officials said both cases were community transmissions and did not involve people who had returned recently from at-risk areas.

Meanwhile, Saturday's match between France and Ireland is the latest Six Nations fixture to be postponed because of concerns over the coronavirus outbreak.

The UK government has said its advice could change in the next 10 to 14 days to have people who show "even minor" signs of respiratory tract infections to self-isolate in an effort to tackle the outbreak.

For advice and the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak, the Public Health Agency has a dedicated website.

arizonatasteslike on March 9th, 2020 at 16:12 UTC »

Oh shit, the snakes are going to seize this opportunity to invade the city!

ThatsMyHat on March 9th, 2020 at 15:49 UTC »

All Parades in Ireland are cancelled now.

morph113 on March 9th, 2020 at 15:24 UTC »

It's definitely the right decision, though I wonder how much of an impact it will make. Tourists that already booked their holidays will still come next week anyway or are already here. Also people will still be on the streets and in pubs that day, typically you can't move an inch in many pubs in town because they are overcrowded. While the cancellation of the mass gathering at the parade is the right move, I fear it might not make a big of a difference.