Further restrictions are expected, on top of those announced on December 3rd, after ministers sounded the alarm over crowds in city centres and health authorities said the coronavirus infection rate is still too high.
“We now need some further restrictive measures,” Conte told Italy's La Stampa newspaper on Tuesday, without giving any details.
“We must avoid a third wave at all costs, because it would be devastating also in terms of the loss of human lives,” he added.
Conte and other ministers met with the CTS (Technical Scientific Committee), the government's advisory panel of health and scientific experts, on Monday to discuss further measures.
Ministers pointed to scenes of crowded shopping streets over the weekend as a cause for concern.
READ ALSO: 'Unacceptable crowds': Alarm as Christmas shoppers pack Italian cities
Photo: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP
Italian media over the weekend showed photos of city centres thronged with people, as restrictions were eased in several regions and many bars and restaurants reopened for the first time in weeks.
Italian health authorities meanwhile warned that the rate of new infections in the country is still worryingly high.
As a result, ministers say, they're looking at retightening the rules over Christmas.
“We are discussing the two weeks over the Christmas holidays,” Health Minister Roberto Speranza told reporters on Monday. “I hope that further measures can be taken in a short time to avert a hypothetical third wave”.
An announcement on new restrictions is expected by Wednesday, according to Italian media reports, as discussions continue between ministers and the CTS.
Italian media speculates that the government could be about to introduce tough measures similar to those just announced in Germany – but ministers have said the situation in Italy is not comparable as the infection rate is rising in Germany, and falling in Italy.
Instead, deputy health minister Sandra Zampa told Radio anch'io, a show on Rai public radio, that the government was considering options ranging “from orange zone to possibly red zone (restrictions)” for the whole country.
Either option would send Italy into a form of lockdown over the holidays, with restrictions on travel and business openings.
Conte's cabinet this month launched a “Christmas cashback” scheme that offers shoppers a ten pecrcent government refund for expenditure of up to 1,500 euros – though the purchase must be made in a physical store and not online, a move intended to support struggling small retailers.
Meanwhile, health authorities have recommended tighter restrictions, saying the tracing system and many hospitals are still struggling to cope.
As things currently stand, Italy will impose stricter limits on international and domestic travel from December 21st to January 6th, with everyone arriving from overseas subject to 14 days of quarantine and crossing between Italian regions only allowed in emergencies.
The government has already reconsidered several rules since it unveiled the emergency decree on December 3rd.
In clarifications posted to its website, the government updated the rules on visiting second homes and on quarantine after travel abroad over the Christmas period.
The government was also set to loosen restrictions on non-essential travel between towns on key dates. Currently, all travel between towns will be forbidden on December 25-26th and January 1st.
It is widely expected that this rule may yet be altered to allow some travel between neigbouring towns, however nothing has been officially confirmed.
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