Microsoft Azure Certification Training

964 people got COVID-19 after an outdoor music festival, despite compulsory negative tests, vaccines, or other proof of immunity

Stock image of two friends raising their hands, wearing festival bracelets, at an outdoor festival, crowds are sitting down blurred in the background, a tent is in the far background.
People at an unnamed festival

964 people who attended a Dutch outdoor music festival tested positive for the coronavirus.
The festival did not impose social distancing, arguing that its screening procedures were enough.
Information on the severity of the cases was not available.
See more stories on Insider's business page.

Nearly a thousand people tested positive for the coronavirus after attending a two-day outdoor festival in the Netherlands on the weekend of July 3.

According to figures from health officials in Utrecht, 448 were exposed during the first day of the festival, and 516 the second day. The figures were reported by Algemeen Dagblad, a Dutch daily newspaper.

More cases are likely to be identified in the coming days, one official said, per the online news portal Dutch News.

Information about whether the festival-goers developed symptoms from the infection, and if so how badly, was not immediately available.

Among vaccinated people who developed "breakthrough" infections, symptoms are typically milder.

The Verknipt festival, which attracted about 20,000 visitors, was one of the first after the country relaxed its COVID-19 measures on June 26, local media RTVUtrecht reported.

Before entry, visitors were asked to prove that they had been vaccinated, had recovered from COVID-19 recently, or had tested negative for COVID-19.

Posts from the festival show attendees in close proximity, as can be seen in this tweet from the Mayor of Utrecht Sharon Dijksma, who went on July 3.

-Sharon Dijksma (@sharon_dijksma) July 3, 2021

This tweet from Spanish DJ Fatima Hajji shows a similar scene:

-Fatima Hajji (@fatimahajji) July 4, 2021The government admits it went too fast

On Monday, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte apologized for lifting restrictions too soon, calling it a "miscalculation," Euronews reported.

"What we thought was possible turned out to be wrong in practice. We made a miscalculation, we are disappointed about it and we apologise," he said.

The government reimposed restrictions on nightlife two weeks after lifting them, and canceled all event with large crowds until August 14, the Irish Times reported.

According to data from the Dutch Institute of Public Health, cases in the Netherlands have shot up, reaching almost 52,000 new reported COVID-19 infections on the week of July 6.

The figure was five times the number reported the previous week. Of the infections that could be traced back to the source, 37% happened in the hospitality industry, the country's institute of public health found, ABC News reported.

Late last month, 180 people were infected at a "covid-free" party attended by 800 people in a nightclub in Enschede, in the eastern Netherlands, Insider's Mia Jankowicz reported.

A graph shows daily new confirmed COVID-19 cases shooting up in the Netherlands
Daily new confirmed COVID-19 cases in the Netherlands, as of July 14.

In spite of the rise in cases, COVID-19 hospitalizations stayed low, with 60 new hospital admissions on the week of July 6, of which just 12 required intensive care, according to official data.

-Rena Netjes (@RenaNetjes) July 14, 2021

Read the original article on Business Insider

To discover more visit: feedproxy.google.com

Add Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

mega888