Colombians are usually fairly docile.If you tell them to put their masks on (properly, covering their nose) they will usually do it. Not like in the US or Canada, where people will get in a fidst fight.
I have to admit it is a bit disconerting that people dont wear masks on domestic flights. Doesnt surprise me.
I know a pilot and his wife in Canada who got COVID on international log haul flights way back in April when cases were pretty low.
Supposedly International carrieres have HEPA systems with 6 filtered air changes and strict protocols (should you ever be lucky enough to get on aflight that hasnt been cancelled) but I am sure Colombian carriers dont have anything like that. Easy money , slack discipline and standards-the Colombian way.
I have been watching the statistics quite closely, and where I am in Caldas it got quite high for 3 weeks...450 new cases a day (for a million population) with limited testing. Never closed down gyms, or restaurants, no Toque de Queda (curfew), no Ley seca (Alcohol prohibition) and they said the ICU capacity maxed out at 75%.
Valle de Cauca had figures of lower intensity per capita-less than 250 new cases a day per million population. But this is misleading, because supposedly the ICU are at 90% capacity and one day they had 28 deaths (alone) in Cali, a city of 2.2 million.
The reason for the descrepancy inthe statistics could be that there is even much lower testing than the low Colombian average per capita in Cali , and people only get tested when they are really ,really sick. I know this is the case because I know several people who got the symptomns and were very sick, and stayed home, whereas in 1st world countries they would be hospitalized. Maybe one person in the extended family got tested , and were positive, the health people just told them to isolate, and didnt follow up..so 8 or 10 people had the virus-some to the point where they need hospitalization-but according to statistics , ony 1 had the virus.
Also these same people go out in publiic and work and mix only 4 days after testing or having bad symtoms when they are highly contagious...some without masks, poor fitting masks and no social distancing.The health officials dont follow up on people after positive testing, and there nevere ever has been "contact tracing".
Anyway in te case of Cali with 90% ICU occupancy they are taking the "Drastic" steps of having a curfew from 1 am to 5 am to keep the partiers in check-and a "ley Seca" -alcohol prohibition-Iam not sure if it is 24 hours a day or just 1 am to 5am.
Also not sure if this applies to a of Cali or just some barrios. It is until December 16th at least.
As if these pathetic measures will help, even if they are enforced will make any difference..