Democracy Dies in Darkness<br><br>Get 1 year for $29<br><br>Sign in<br>Newsletters & Alerts<br>Gift subscriptions<br>Contact us<br>Help desk<br>Skip to main content<br>Coronavirus<br>Live updates<br>U.S. map<br>World map<br>FAQs<br>How to help<br>Flattening the curve<br>Newsletter<br>Asia & Pacific<br>New Zealand isn’t just flattening the curve. It’s squashing it.<br>Ardern calls the Easter Bunny an 'essential worker'<br>New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern assured children on April 6 that the Easter Bunny could make an appearance despite social distancing. (Reuters)<br>By <br>Anna Fifield <br>April 7, 2020 at 5:31 p.m. GMT+7<br>HAVELOCK NORTH, New Zealand — It has been less than two weeks since New Zealand imposed a coronavirus lockdown so strict that swimming at the beach and hunting in bushland were banned. They’re not essential activities, plus we have been told not to do anything that could divert emergency services’ resources.<br><br>People have been walking and biking strictly in their neighborhoods; lining up six feet apart outside grocery stores while waiting to go one in, one out; and joining swaths of the world in discovering the vagaries of home schooling.<br><br>It took only 10 days for signs that the approach here — “elimination” rather than the “containment” goal of the United States and other Western countries — is working.
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